Three Days of the Condor
Originally Published as
Six Days of the Condor
James Grady
Rosetta Books
Copyright
Three Days of the Condor
Copyright © 1970 by James Grady
Cover art and eForeword to the electronic edition copyright
© 2002 by RosettaBooks, LLC
For a lot of people, including the folks,
Shirley, who helped,
and Rick, who suffered through it
Contents
eForeword
PrefaceChapter 1 WednesdayChapter 2 Thursday, Morning to
Early AfternoonChapter 3 Thursday AfternoonChapter 4 Thursday Evening-Friday
MorningChapter 5 SaturdayChapter 6 SundayChapter 7 Monday, Morning to
MidAfternoonChapter 8 Late MondayChapter 9 Tuesday, Morning Through Early
EveningChapter 10 Late Tuesday Night, Early Wednesday MorningChapter 11
Wednesday MorningChapter 12 Wednesday AfternoonAbout The AuthorAbout this Title
eForeword
James Grady knows the secret to writing good spy thrillers:
always put extraordinary events into a believable context. It is the
carefully-blended combination of imagination and verisimilitude that animates Three Days of the Condor and makes its
explosive plot so spine-tingling. Although we know that nothing in the novel
ever happened, Grady goes to painstaking lengths to convince us that it could
have. The story was also the basis for Sydney Pollack's classic 1975 film,
which featured an all-star cast including Faye Dunaway and Robert Redford.
The story is a classic "man on the run" plot,
familiar to fans of such films and novels as The Fugitive, Marathon Man and The
Terminator. CIA agent Ronald Malcolm, aka "the Condor," works
with a handful of other agents out of a nondescript Washington brownstone. When
he returns to work from an extended lunch break to find all of his coworkers
shot dead, he realizes that only an oversight by the assassins has spared his
life. Panicked, he contacts CIA headquarters for help. But when an attempted
rendezvous with agents goes terribly awry, Malcolm realizes that no one is to
be trusted. He disappears into the streets of Washington hoping to evade
whoever is pursuing him long enough to unravel the mystery and save his life.
The atmosphere, as one might expect, is one of unremitting
tension and paranoia. The paranoia trades on the sense that something sinister
lurks unseen— but only just out of sight— beneath the surface of everyday life.
To this end, Grady has rendered his beloved Washington, D.C. in vivid detail,
down to the names of real bars, theatres and army-navy stores. The inner
workings of the CIA and the array of tactics employed to search for the elusive
Condor have been carefully researched and meticulously documented. The end
result is believability, a three-dimensional background that makes the
adrenalized events of the Condor's six-day (reduced to three days in the
movie), high-stakes game of hide-and-seek seem all the more fateful and
chilling.
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ThreeDaysoftheCondor
Preface
The events described in this novel are fictitious, at least
to the author's best knowledge. Whether these events might take place is
another question, for the structure and operations of the intelligence
community are based on fact. Malcolm's branch of the CIA and the 54/12 Group do
indeed exist, though perhaps no longer under the designations given to them
here.
For the factual background to this story, the author is
indebted to the following sources: Jack Anderson, "Washington
Merry-Go-round" (various dates); Alfred W. McCoy, The Politics of Heroin in
Southeast Asia (1972); Andrew Tully, CIA: The Inside Story (1962); David Wise
and Thomas B. Ross, The Invisible
Government (1964) and The Espionage
Establishment (1967).
…most significant triumphs come not
in the secrets passed in the dark, but in patient reading, hour after hour, of
highly technical periodicals. In a real sense they [the "patriotic and
dedicated" CIA researchers] are America's professional students. They are
unsung just as they are invaluable.
—President Lyndon B. Johnson, on
swearing in Richard M. Helms as CIA director, June 30, 1966
Chapter 1
Wednesday
Four blocks behind the Library of Congress, just past
Southeast A and Fourth Street (one door from the corner), is a white stucco
three-story building. Nestled in among the other town houses, it would be
unnoticeable if not for its color. The clean brightness stands out among the
fading reds, grays, greens, and occasional off-whites. Then, too, the short black
iron picket fence and the small, neatly trimmed lawn lend an aura of quiet
dignity the other buildings lack. However, few people notice the building.
Residents of the area have long since blended it into the familiar
neighborhood. The dozens of Capitol Hill and Library of Congress workers who
pass it each day don't have time to notice it, and probably wouldn't even if
they had time. Located where it is, almost off "the Hill," most of
the tourist hordes never come close to it. The few who do are usually looking
for a policeman to direct them out of the notoriously rough neighborhood to the
safety of national monuments.
If a passerby (for some strange reason) is attracted to the
building and takes a closer look, his investigation would reveal very little
out of the ordinary. As he stood outside the picket fence, he would probably
first note a raised bronze plaque, about three feet by two feet, which
proclaims the building to be the national headquarters of the American Literary
Historical Society. In Washington, D.C., a city of hundreds of landmarks and
headquarters for a multitude of organizations, such a building is not
extraordinary. Should the passerby have an eye for architecture and design, he
would be pleasantly intrigued by the ornate black wooden door flawed by a
curiously large peephole. If our passerby's curiosity is not hampered by
shyness, he might open the gate. He probably will not notice the slight click
as the magnetic hinge moves from its resting place and breaks an electric
circuit. A few short paces later, our passerby mounts the black iron steps to
the stoop and rings the bell.
If, as is usually the case, Walter is drinking coffee in the
small kitchen, arranging crates of books, or sweeping the floor, then the myth
of security is not even flaunted. The visitor hears Mrs. Russell's harsh voice
bellow "Come in!" just before she punches the buzzer on her desk
releasing the electronic lock.
The first thing a visitor to the Society's headquarters
notices is its extreme tidiness. As he stands in the stairwell, his eyes are
probably level with the top of Walter's desk, a scant four inches from the edge
of the well. There are never any papers on Walter's desk, but then, with a
steel reinforced front, it was never meant for paper. When the visitor turns to
his right and climbs out of the stairwell, he sees Mrs. Russell. Unlike
Walter's work area, her desk spawns paper. It covers the top, protrudes from
drawers, and hides her ancient typewriter. Behind the processed forest sits
Mrs. Russell. Her gray hair is thin and usually disheveled. In any case, it is
too short to be of much help to her face. A horseshoe-shaped brooch dated 1932
adorns what was once a left breast. She smokes constantly.
Strangers who get this far into the Society's headquarters
(other than mailmen and delivery boys) are few in number. Those few, after
being screened by Walter's stare (if he is there), deal with Mrs. Russell. If
the stranger comes for business, she directs him to the proper person, provided
she accepts his clearance. If the stranger is merely one of the brave and
curious, she delivers a five-minute, inordinately dull lecture on the Society's
background of foundation funding, its purpose of literary analysis,
advancement, and achievement (referred to as "the 3 A's"), shoves
pamphlets into usually less-than-eager hands, states that there is no one
present who can answer further questions, suggests writing to an unspecified
address for further information, and then bids a brisk "Good day."
Visitors are universally stunned by this onslaught and leave meekly, probably
without noticing the box on Walter's desk which took their picture or the red
light and buzzer above the door which announces the opening of the gate. The
visitor's disappointment would dissolve into fantasy should he learn that he
had just visited a section branch office of a department in the Central
Intelligence Agency's Intelligence Division.
The National Security Act of 1947 created the Central
Intelligence Agency, a result of the World War II experience of being caught
flat-footed at Pearl Harbor. The Agency, or the Company, as many of its
employees call it, is the largest and most active entity in the far-flung
American intelligence network, a network composed of eleven major agencies,
around two hundred thousand persons, and annually budgeted in the billions of
dollars. The CIA's activities, like those of its major counterparts— Britain's
MI6, Russia's KGB, and Red China's Social Affairs Department— range through a
spectrum of covert espionage, technical research, the funding of loosely linked
political action groups, support to friendly governments, and direct
paramilitary operations. The wide variety of activities of these agencies,
coupled with their basic mission of national security in a troubled world, has
made the intelligence agency one of the most important branches of government.
In America, former CIA Director Allen Dulles once said, "The National
Security Act of 1947… has given Intelligence a more influential position in our
government than Intelligence enjoys in any other government of the world."
The main activity of the CIA is simple, painstaking
research. Hundreds of researchers daily scour technical journals, domestic and
foreign periodicals of all kinds, speeches, and media broadcasts. This research
is divided between two of the four divisions of the CIA. The Research Division
(RD) is in charge of technical intelligence, and its experts provide detailed
reports of the latest scientific advances in all countries, including the
United States and its allies. The Intelligence Division (ID) engages in a
highly specialized form of scholastic research. About 80 percent of the
information ID handles comes from "open" sources: public magazines,
broadcasts, journals, and books. ID digests its data and from this fare
produces three major types of reports: one type makes long-range projections
dealing with areas of interest, a second is a daily review of the current world
situation, and the third tries to detect gaps in CIA activities. The research
gathered by both ID and RD is used by the other two divisions: Support (the
administrative arm which deals with logistics, equipment, security, and
communications) and Plans (all covert activities, the actual spying division).
The American Literary Historical Society, with headquarters
in Washington and a small receiving office in Seattle, is a section branch of
one of the smaller departments in the CIA. Because of the inexact nature of the
data the department deals with, it is only loosely allied to ID, and, indeed,
to CIA as a whole. The department (officially designated as Department 17,
CIAID) reports are not consistently incorporated in any one of the three major
research report areas. Indeed, Dr. Lappe, the very serious, very nervous head
of the Society (officially titled Section 9, Department 17, CIAID), slaves over
weekly, monthly, and annual reports which may not even make the corresponding
report of mother Department 17. In turn, Department 17 reports often will not
impress major group coordinators on the division level and thus will fail to be
incorporated into any of the ID reports. C'est
la vie.
The function of the Society and of Department 17 is to keep
track of all espionage and related acts recorded in literature. In other words,
the Department reads spy thrillers and murder mysteries. The antics and
situations in thousands of volumes of mystery and mayhem are carefully detailed
and analyzed in Department 17 files. Volumes dating as far back as James
Fenimore Cooper have been scrutinized. Most of the company-owned volumes are
kept at the Langley, Virginia, CIA central complex, but the Society
headquarters maintains a library of almost three thousand volumes. At one time
the Department was housed in the Christian Heurich Brewery near the State
Department, but in the fall of 1961, when CIA moved to its Langley complex, the
Department transferred to the Virginia suburbs. In 1970 the ever-increasing
volume of pertinent literature began to create logistic and expense problems
for the Department. Additionally, the Deputy Director of ID questioned the need
for highly screened and, therefore, highly paid analysts. Consequently, the
Department reopened its branch section in metropolitan Washington, this time
conveniently close to the Library of Congress.
Because the employees were not in the central complex, they
needed only to pass a cursory Secret clearance rather than the exacting Top
Secret clearance required for employment at the complex. Naturally, their
salaries paralleled their rating.
The analysts for the Department keep abreast of the literary
field and divide their work basically by mutual consent. Each analyst has areas
of expertise, areas usually defined by author. In addition to summarizing plots
and methods of all the books, the analysts daily receive a series of specially
"sanitized" reports from the Langley complex. The reports contain
capsule descriptions of actual events with all names deleted and as few
necessary details as possible. Fact and fiction are compared, and if major
correlations occur, the analyst begins a further investigation with a more
detailed but still sanitized report. If the correlation still appears strong,
the information and reports are passed on for review to a higher classified
section of the Department. Somewhere after that the decision is made as to
whether the author was guessing and lucky or whether he knew more than he
should. If the latter is the case, the author is definitely unlucky, for then a
report is filed with the Plans Division for action. The analysts are also
expected to compile lists of helpful tips for agents. These lists are forwarded
to Plans Division instructors, who are always looking for new tricks.
Ronald Malcolm was supposed to be working on one of those
lists that morning, but instead he sat reversed on a wooden chair, his chin
resting on the scratched walnut back. It was fourteen minutes until nine
o'clock, and he had been sitting there since he climbed the spiral staircase to
his second-story office at 8:30, spilling hot coffee and swearing loudly all
the way. The coffee was long gone and Malcolm badly wanted a second cup, but he
didn't dare take his eyes off his window.
Barring illness, every morning between 8:40 and 9:00 an
incredibly beautiful girl walked up Southeast A, past Malcolm's window, and
into the Library of Congress. And every morning, barring illness or unavoidable
work, Malcolm watched her for the brief interval it took her to pass out of
view. It became a ritual, one that helped Malcolm rationalize getting out of a
perfectly comfortable bed to shave and walk to work. At first lust dominated
Malcolm's attitude, but this had gradually been replaced by a sense of awe that
was beyond his definition. In February he gave up even trying to think about
it, and now, two months later, he merely waited and watched.
It was the first real day of spring. Early in the year there
had been intervals of sunshine scattered through generally rainy days, but no
real spring. Today dawned bright and stayed bright. An aroma promising cherry
blossoms crept through the morning smog. Out of the corner of his eye Malcolm
saw her coming, and he tipped his chair closer to the window.
The girl didn't walk up the street, she strode, moving with
purpose and the pride born of modest yet firm, knowledgeable confidence. Her
shiny brown hair lay across her back, sweeping past her broad shoulders to fall
halfway to her slender waist. She wore no makeup, and when she wasn't wearing
sunglasses one could see how her eyes, large and well-spaced, perfectly matched
her straight nose, her wide mouth, her full face, her square chin. The tight
brown sweater hugged her large breasts and even without a bra there was no sag.
The plaid skirt revealed full thighs, almost too muscular. Her calves flowed to
her ankles. Three more firm steps and she vanished from sight.
Malcolm sighed and settled back in his chair. His typewriter
had a half-used sheet of paper in the carriage. He rationalized that this
represented an adequate start on his morning's work. He belched loudly, picked
up his empty cup, and left his little red and blue room.
When he got to the stairs, Malcolm paused. There were two
coffeepots in the building, one on the main floor in the little kitchen area
behind Mrs. Russell's desk and one on the third floor on the wrapping table at the
back of the open stacks. Each pot had its advantages and disadvantages. The
first-floor pot was larger and served the most people. Besides Mrs. Russell and
ex-drill instructor Walter ("Sergeant Jennings, if you please!"), Dr.
Lappe and the new accountant-librarian Heidegger had their offices downstairs,
and thus in the great logistical scheme of things used that pot. The coffee
was, of course, made by Mrs. Russell, whose many faults did not include poor
cooking. There were two disadvantages to the first-floor pot. If Malcolm or Ray
Thomas, the other analyst on the second floor, used that pot, they ran the risk
of meeting Dr. Lappe. Those meetings were uncomfortable. The other disadvantage
was Mrs. Russell and her smell, or, as Ray was wont to call her, Perfume Polly.
Use of the third-floor pot was minimal, as only Harold
Martin and Tamatha Reynolds, the other two analysts, were permanently assigned
that pot. Sometimes Ray or Malcolm exercised their option. As often as he
dared, Walter wandered by for refreshment and a glance at Tamatha's frail form.
Tamatha was a nice girl, but she hadn't a clue about making coffee. In addition
to subjecting himself to a culinary atrocity by using the third-floor pot,
Malcolm risked being cornered by Harold Martin and bombarded with the latest
statistics, scores, and opinions from the world of sports, followed by
nostalgic stories of high-school prowess. He decided to go downstairs.
Mrs. Russell greeted Malcolm with the usual disdainful grunt
as he walked by her desk. Sometimes, just to see if she had changed, Malcolm
stopped to "chat" with her. She would shuffle papers, and no matter
what Malcolm talked about she rambled through a disjointed monologue dealing
with how hard she worked, how sick she was, and how little she was appreciated.
This morning Malcolm went no further than a sardonic grin and an exaggerated
nod.
Malcolm heard the click of an office door opening just as he
started back upstairs with his cup of coffee, and braced himself for a lecture
from Dr. Lappe.
"Oh, ah, Mr. Malcolm, may I… may I talk to you for a
moment?"
Relief. The speaker was Heidegger and not Dr. Lappe. With a
smile and a sigh, Malcolm turned to face a slight man so florid that even his
bald spot glowed. The inevitable tab-collar white shirt and narrow black tie
squeezed the large head from the body.
"Hi, Rich," said Malcolm, "how are you?"
"I'm fine… Ron. Fine." Heidegger tittered. Despite
six months of total abstinence and hard work, his nerves were still shot. Any
inquiry into Heidegger's condition, however polite, brought back the days when
he fearfully sneaked drinks in CIA bathrooms, frantically chewing gum to hide
the security risk on his breath. After he "volunteered" for cold
turkey, traveled through the hell of withdrawal, and began to pick up pieces of
his sanity, the doctors told him he had been turned in by the security section
in charge of monitoring the rest rooms. "Would you, I mean, could you come
in for a second?"
Any distraction was welcome. "Sure, Rich."
They entered the small office reserved for the
accountant-librarian and sat, Heidegger behind his desk, Malcolm on the old
stuffed chair left by the building's former tenant. For several seconds they
sat silent.
Poor little man, thought Malcolm. Scared shitless, still
hoping you can work your way back into favor. Still hoping for return of your
Top Secret rating so you can move from this dusty green bureaucratic office to
another dusty but more Secret office. Maybe, Malcolm thought, if you are lucky,
your next office will be one of the other three colors intended to
"maximize an efficient office environment," maybe you'll get a nice
blue room the same soothing shade as three of my walls and hundreds of other
government offices.
"Right!" Heidegger's shout echoed through the
room. Suddenly conscious of his volume, he leaned back in his chair and began
again. "I… I hate to bother you like this…"
"Oh, no trouble at all."
"Right. Well, Ron— you don't mind if I call you Ron, do
you? Well, as you know, I'm new to this section. I decided to go over the
records for the last few years to acquaint myself with the operation." He
chuckled nervously. "Dr. Lappe's briefing was, shall we say, less than
complete."
Malcolm joined in his chuckle. Anybody who laughed at Dr.
Lappe had something on the ball. Malcolm decided he might like Heidegger after
all.
He continued, "Right. Well, you've been here two years,
haven't you? Ever since the move from Langley?"
Right, thought Malcolm as he nodded. Two years, two months,
and some odd days.
"Right. Well, I've found some… discrepancies I think
need clearing up, and I thought maybe you could help me." Heidegger paused
and received a willing but questioning shrug from Malcolm. "Well, I found
two funny things— or rather, funny things in two areas.
"The first one has to do with accounts, you know, money
payed in and out for expenses, salaries, what have you. You probably don't know
anything about that, it's something I'll have to figure out. But the other
thing has to do with the books, and I'm checking with you and the other
research analysts to see if I can find out anything before I go to Dr. Lappe
with my written report." He paused for another encouraging nod. Malcolm
didn't disappoint him.
"Have you ever, well, have you ever noticed any missing
books? No, wait," he said, seeing the confused look on Malcolm's face,
"let me say that again. Do you ever know of an instance where we haven't
got books we ordered or books we should have?"
"No, not that I know of," said Malcolm, beginning
to get bored. "If you could tell me which ones are missing, or might be
missing…" He let his sentence trail off, and Heidegger took the cue.
"Well, that's just it, I don't really know. I mean, I'm
not really sure if any are, and if they are, what they are or even why they are
missing. It's all very confusing." Silently, Malcolm agreed.
"You see," Heidegger continued, "sometime in
1968 we received a shipment of books from our Seattle purchasing branch. We
received all the volumes they sent, but just by chance I happened to notice
that the receiving clerk signed for five
crates of books. But the billing order— which, I might add, bears both the
check marks and signatures of our agent in Seattle and the trucking firm— says there were seven crates. That means we're missing two crates of books without
really missing any books. Do you understand what I mean?"
Lying slightly, Malcolm said, "Yeah, I understand what
you're saying, though I think it's probably just a mistake. Somebody, probably
the clerk, couldn't count. Anyway, you say we're not missing any books. Why not
just let it go?"
"You don't understand!" exclaimed Heidegger,
leaning forward and shocking Malcolm with the intensity in his voice. "I'm
responsible for these records! When I take over I have to certify I receive
everything true and proper. I did that, and this mistake is botching up the
records! It looks bad, and if it's ever found I'll get the blame. Me!" By
the time he finished, he was leaning across the desk and his volume was again
causing echoes.
Malcolm was thoroughly bored. The prospect of listening to
Heidegger ramble on about inventory discrepancies did not interest him in the
least. Malcolm also didn't like the way Heidegger's eyes burned behind those
thick glasses when he got excited. It was time to leave. He leaned toward
Heidegger.
"Look, Rich," he said, "I know this mess
causes problems for you, but I'm afraid I can't help you out. Maybe one of the
other analysts knows something I don't, but I doubt it. If you want my advice,
you'll forget the whole thing and cover it up. In case you haven't guessed,
that's what your predecessor Johnson always did. If you want to press things, I
suggest you don't go to Dr. Lappe. He'll get upset, muddy the whole mess beyond
belief, blow it out of proportion, and everybody will be unhappy."
Malcolm stood up and walked to the door. Looking back, he
saw a small, trembling man sitting behind an open ledger and a draftsman's light.
Malcolm walked as far as Mrs. Russell's desk before he let
out his sigh of relief. He threw what was left of the cold coffee down the
sink, and went upstairs to his room, sat down, put his feet up on his desk,
farted, and closed his eyes.
When he opened them a minute later he was staring at his
Picasso print of Don Quixote. The print appropriately hung on his half-painted
red wall. Don Quixote was responsible for Ronald Leonard Malcolm's exciting
position as a Central Intelligence agent. Two years.
In September of 1970, Malcolm took his long delayed Master's
written examination. Everything went beautifully for the first two hours: he
wrote a stirring explanation of Plato's allegory of the cave, analyzed the
condition of two of the travelers in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, discussed the significance of rats in Camus's The Plague, and faked his way through
Holden Caulfield's struggle against homosexuality in Catcher in the Rye. Then he turned to the last page and ran into a
brick wall that demanded, "Discuss in depth at least three significant
incidents in Cervantes' Don Quixote,
including in the discussion the symbolic meaning of each incident, its relation
to the other two incidents and the plot as a whole, and show how Cervantes used
these incidents to characterize Don Quixote and Sancho Panza."
Malcolm had never read Don
Quixote. For five precious minutes he stared at the test. Then, very
carefully, he opened a fresh examination book and began to write:
"I have never read Don
Quixote, but I think he was defeated by a windmill. I am not sure what
happened to Sancho Panza.
"The adventures of Don Quixote and Sancho Panza, a team
generally regarded as seeking justice, can be compared to the adventures of Rex
Stout's two most famous characters, Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin. For example,
in the classic Wolfe adventure The Black
Mountain…"
After finishing a lengthy discussion of Nero Wolfe, using The Black Mountain as a focal point,
Malcolm turned in his completed examination, went home to his apartment, and
contemplated his bare feet.
Two days later he was called to the office of the professor
of Spanish Literature. To his surprise, Malcolm was not chastised for his
examination answer. Instead, the professor asked Malcolm if he was interested
in "murder mysteries." Startled, Malcolm told the truth: reading such
books helped him maintain some semblance of sanity in college. Smiling, the
professor asked if he would like to "so maintain your sanity for
money?" Naturally, Malcolm said, he would. The professor made a phone
call, and that day Malcolm lunched with his first CIA agent.
It is not unusual for college professors, deans, and other
academic personnel to act as CIA recruiters. In the early 1950s a Yale coach
recruited a student who was later caught infiltrating Red China.
Two months later Malcolm was finally "cleared for
limited employment," as are 17 percent of all CIA applicants. After a
special, cursory training period, Malcolm walked up the short flight of iron
stairs of the American Literary Historical Society to Mrs. Russell, Dr. Lappe,
and his first day as a full-fledged intelligence agent.
Malcolm sighed at the wall, his calculated victory over Dr.
Lappe. His third day at work, Malcolm quit wearing a suit and tie. One week of
gentle hints passed before Dr. Lappe called him in for a little chat about
etiquette. While the good Doctor agreed that bureaucracies tended to be a
little stifling, he implied that one really should find a method other than
"unconventional" dress for letting in the sun. Malcolm said nothing,
but the next day he showed up for work early, properly dressed in suit and tie
and carrying a large box. By the time Walter reported to Dr. Lappe at ten,
Malcolm had almost finished painting one of his walls fire-engine red. Dr.
Lappe sat in stunned silence while Malcolm innocently explained his newest
method for letting in the sun. When two other analysts began to pop into the
office to exclaim their approval, the good Doctor quietly stated that perhaps
Malcolm had been right to brighten the individual rather than the institution.
Malcolm sincerely and quickly agreed. The red paint and painting equipment
moved to the third-floor storage room. Malcolm's suit and tie once more
vanished. Dr. Lappe chose individual rebellion rather than inspired collective
revolution against government property.
Malcolm sighed to nostalgia before he resumed describing a
classic John Dickson Carr method for creating "locked-door"
situations.
Meanwhile Heidegger had been busy. He took Malcolm's advice
concerning Dr. Lappe, but he was too frightened to try and hide a mistake from
the Company. If they could catch you in the bathroom, no place was safe. He
also knew that if he could pull a coup, rectify a malfunctioning situation, or
at least show he could responsibly recognize problems, his chances of being
reinstated in grace would greatly increase. So through ambition and paranoia
(always a bad combination) Richard Heidegger made his fatal mistake.
He wrote a short memo to the chief of mother Department 17.
In carefully chosen, obscure, but leading terms, he described what he had told
Malcolm. All memos were usually cleared through Dr. Lappe, but exceptions were
not unknown. Had Heidegger followed the normal course of procedure, everything
would have been fine, for Dr. Lappe knew better than to let a memo critical of
his section move up the chain of command. Heidegger guessed this, so he
personally put the envelope in the delivery bag.
* * *
Twice a day, once in the morning and once in the evening,
two cars of heavily armed men pick up and deliver intra-agency communications
from all CIA substations in the Washington area. The communications are driven
the eight miles to Langley, where they are sorted for distribution. Rich's memo
went out in the afternoon pickup.
A strange and unorthodox thing happened to Rich's memo. Like
all communications to and from the Society, the memo disappeared from the
delivery room before the sorting officially began. The memo appeared on the
desk of a wheezing man in a spacious east-wing office. The man read it twice,
once quickly, then again, very, very slowly. He left the room and arranged for
all files pertaining to the Society to disappear and reappear at a Washington
location. He then came back and telephoned to arrange a date at a current art
exhibit. Next he reported in sick and caught a bus for the city. Within an hour
he was engaged in earnest conversation with a distinguished-looking gentleman
who might have been a banker. They talked as they strolled up Pennsylvania Avenue.
That night the distinguished-looking gentleman met yet
another man, this time in Clyde's, a noisy, crowded Georgetown bar frequented
by the Capitol Hill crowd. They too took a walk, stopping occasionally to gaze
at reflections in the numerous shopwindows. The second man was also
distinguished-looking. Striking is a more correct adjective. Something about
his eyes told you he definitely was not a banker. He listened while the first
man talked.
"I am afraid we have a slight problem."
"Really?"
"Yes. Weatherby intercepted this today." He handed
the second man Heidegger's memo.
The second man had to read it only once. "I see what
you mean."
"I knew you would. We really must take care of this,
now."
"I will see to it."
"Of course."
"You realize that there may be other complications
besides this," the second man said as he gestured with Heidegger's memo,
"which may have to be taken care of."
"Yes. Well, that is regrettable, but unavoidable."
The second man nodded and waited for the first man to continue. "We must be
very sure, completely sure about those complications." Again the second
man nodded, waiting. "And there is one other element. Speed. Time is of
the absolute essence. Do what you must to follow that assumption."
The second man thought for a moment and then said,
"Maximum speed may necessitate… cumbersome and sloppy activity."
The first man handed him a portfolio containing all the
"disappeared" files and said, "Do what you must."
The two men parted after a brief nod of farewell. The first
man walked four blocks and turned the corner before he caught a taxi.
He was glad the meeting was over. The second man watched him
go, waited a few minutes scanning the passing crowds, then headed for a bar and
a telephone.
That morning at 3:15 Heidegger unlocked his door to the
knock of police officers. When he opened the door he found two men in ordinary
clothes smiling at him. One was very tall and painfully thin. The other was
quite distinguished, but if you looked in his eyes you could tell he wasn't a
banker.
The two men shut the door behind them.
These activities have their own
rules and methods of concealment which seek to mislead and obscure.
—President Dwight D. Eisenhower,
1960
Chapter 2
Thursday, Morning to Early Afternoon
The rain came back Thursday. Malcolm woke with the start of
a cold— congested, tender throat and a slightly woozy feeling. In addition to
waking up sick, he woke up late. He thought for several minutes before deciding
to go to work. Why waste sick time on a cold? He cut himself shaving, couldn't
make the hair over his ears stay down, had trouble putting in his right contact
lens, and found that his raincoat had disappeared. As he ran the eight blocks
to work it dawned on him that he might be too late to see The Girl.
When he hit Southeast A, he looked up the block just in time
to see her disappear into the Library of Congress. He watched her so intently
he didn't look where he was going and he stepped in a deep puddle. He was more
embarrassed than angry, but the man he saw in the blue sedan parked just up
from the Society didn't seem to notice the blunder. Mrs. Russell greeted
Malcolm with a curt " 'Bout time." On the way to his room, he spilled
his coffee and burned his hand. Some days you just can't win.
Shortly after ten there was a soft knock on his door, and
Tamatha entered his room. She stared at him for a few seconds through her thick
glasses, a timid smile on her lips. Her hair was so thin Malcolm thought he
could see each individual strand.
"Ron," she whispered, "do you know if Rich is
sick?"
"No!" Malcolm yelled, and then loudly blew his
nose.
"Well, you don't need to bellow! I'm worried about him.
He's not here and he hasn't called in."
"That's too fuckin' bad." Malcolm drew the words
out, knowing that swearing made Tamatha nervous.
"What's eating you,
for heaven's sake?" she said.
"I've got a cold."
"I'll get you an aspirin."
"Don't bother," he said ungraciously. "It
wouldn't help."
"Oh, you're impossible! Goodbye!" She left,
closing the door smartly behind her.
Sweet Jesus, Malcolm thought, then went back to Agatha
Christie.
At 11:15 the phone rang. Malcolm picked it up and heard the
cool voice of Dr. Lappe.
"Malcolm, I have an errand for you, and it's your turn
to go for lunch. I assume everyone will wish to stay in the building."
Malcolm looked out the window at the pouring rain and came to the same
conclusion. Dr. Lappe continued. "Consequently, you might as well kill two
birds with one stone and pick up lunch on the way back from the errand. Walter
is already taking food orders. Since you have to drop a package at the Old
Senate Office Building, I suggest you pick up the food at Hap's. You may leave
now."
Five minutes later a sneezing Malcolm trudged through the
basement to the coalbin exit at the rear of the building. No one had known the
coalbin exit existed, as it hadn't been shown on the original building plans.
It stayed hidden until Walter moved a chest of drawers while chasing a rat and
found the small, dusty door that opened behind the lilac bushes. The door can't
be seen from the outside, but there is enough room to squeeze between the
bushes and the wall. The door only opens from the inside.
Malcolm muttered to himself all the way to the Old Senate
Office Building. He sniffled between mutters. The rain continued. By the time
he reached the building, the rain had changed his suède jacket from a light tan
to a black brown. The blond receptionist in the Senator's office took pity on
him and gave him a cup of coffee while he dried out. She said he was
"officially" waiting for the Senator to confirm delivery of the
package. She coincidentally finished counting the books just as Malcolm
finished his coffee. The girl smiled nicely, and Malcolm decided delivering
murder mysteries to a senator might not be a complete waste.
Normally, it's a five-minute walk from the Old Senate Office
Building to Hap's, but the rain had become a torrent, so Malcolm made the trip
in three minutes. Hap's is a favorite of Capitol Hill employees because it's
quick, tasty, and has its own brand of class. It is a cross between a small
Jewish delicatessen and a Montana bar. Malcolm gave his carry-out list to a
waitress, ordered a meatball sandwich and milk for himself.
While Malcolm had been sipping coffee in the Senator's
office, a gentleman in a raincoat with his hat hiding much of his face turned
the corner from First Street and walked up Southeast A to the blue sedan. The
custom-cut raincoat matched the man's striking appearance, but there was no one
on the street to notice. He casually but completely scanned the street and
buildings, then gracefully climbed in the front seat of the sedan. As he firmly
shut the door, he looked at the driver and said, "Well?"
Without taking his eyes off the building, the driver
wheezed, "All present or accounted for, sir."
"Excellent. I watch while you phone. Tell them to wait
ten minutes, then hit it."
"Yes, sir." The driver began to climb out of the
car, but a sharp voice stopped him.
"Weatherby," the man said, pausing for effect,
"there will be no mistakes."
Weatherby swallowed. "Yes, sir."
Weatherby walked to the open phone next to the grocery store
on the corner of Southeast A and Sixth. In Mr. Henry's, a bar five blocks away
on Pennsylvania Avenue, a tall, frightfully thin man answered the bartender's
page for "Mr. Wazburn." The man called Wazburn listened to the curt
instructions, nodding his assent into the phone. He hung up and returned to his
table, where two friends waited. They paid the bill (three brandy coffees), and
walked up First Street to an alley just behind Southeast A. At the street light
they passed a young, long-haired man in a rain-soaked suède jacket hurrying in
the opposite direction. An empty yellow van stood between the two buildings on
the edge of the alley. The men climbed in the back and prepared for their
morning's work.
Malcolm had just ordered his meatball sandwich when a
mailman with his pouch slung in front of him turned the corner at First Street
to walk down Southeast A. A stocky man in a bulging raincoat walked stiffly a
few paces behind the mailman. Five blocks farther up the street a tall, thin
man walked toward the other two. He also wore a bulging raincoat, though on him
the coat only reached his knees.
As soon as Weatherby saw the mailman turn on to Southeast A,
he pulled out of his parking place and drove away. Neither the men in the car
nor the men on the street acknowledged the others' presence. Weatherby sighed
relief in between wheezes. He was overjoyed to be through with his part of the
assignment. Tough as he was, when he looked at the silent man next to him he
was thankful he had made no mistakes.
But Weatherby was wrong. He had made one small, commonplace
mistake, a mistake he could have easily avoided. A mistake he should have
avoided.
If anyone had been watching, he would have seen three men,
two businessmen and a mailman, coincidentally arrive at the Society's gate at
the same time. The two businessmen politely let the mailman lead the way to the
door and push the button. As usual, Walter was away from his desk (though it
probably wouldn't have made any difference if he had been there). Just as
Malcolm finished his sandwich at Hap's, Mrs. Russell heard the buzzer and
rasped, "Come in."
And with the mailman leading the way, they did.
* * *
Malcolm dawdled over his lunch, polishing off his meatball
sandwich with the specialty of the house, chocolate rum cake. After his second
cup of coffee, his conscience forced him back into the rain. The torrent had
subsided into a drizzle. Lunch had improved Malcolm's spirits and his health.
He took his time, both because he enjoyed the walk and because he didn't want
to drop the three bags of sandwiches. In order to break the routine, he walked
down Southeast A on the side opposite the Society. His decision gave him a
better view of the building as he approached, and consequently he knew
something was wrong much earlier than he normally would have.
It was a little thing that made Malcolm wonder. A small
detail quite out of place yet so insignificant it appeared meaningless. But
Malcolm noticed little things, like the open window on the third floor. The
Society's windows are rolled out rather than pushed up, so the open window
jutted out from the building. When Malcolm first saw the window the
significance didn't register, but when he was a block and a half away it struck
him and he stopped.
It is not unusual for windows in the capital to be open,
even on a rainy day. Washington is usually warm, even during spring rains. But
since the Society building is air-conditioned, the only reason to open a window
is for fresh air. Malcolm knew the fresh-air explanation was absurd— absurd
because of the particular window that stood open. Tamatha's window.
Tamatha— as everyone in the section knew— lived in terror of
open windows. When she was nine, her two teen-age brothers had fought over a
picture the three of them had found while exploring the attic. The older
brother had slipped on a rug and had plunged out the attic window to the street
below, breaking his neck and becoming paralyzed for life. Tamatha had once
confided in Malcolm that only a fire, rape, or murder would make her go near
any open window. Yet her office window stood wide open.
Malcolm tried to quell his uneasiness. Your damn overactive
imagination, he thought. It's probably open for a perfectly good reason. Maybe
somebody is playing a joke on her. But no staff member played practical jokes,
and he knew no one would tease Tamatha in that manner. He walked slowly down
the street, past the building, and to the corner. Everything else seemed in
order. He heard no noise in the building, but then they were all probably
reading.
This is silly, he thought. He crossed the street and quickly
walked to the gate, up the steps, and, after a moment's hesitation, rang the
bell. Nothing. He heard the bell ring inside the building, but Mrs. Russell
didn't answer. He rang again. Still nothing. Malcolm's spine began to tingle
and his neck felt cold.
Walter is shifting books, he thought, and Perfume Polly is
taking a shit. They must be. Slowly he reached in his pocket for the key. When
anything is inserted in the keyhole during the day, buzzers ring and lights
flash all over the building. At night they also ring in Washington police
headquarters, the Langley complex, and a special security house in downtown
Washington. Malcolm heard the soft buzz of the bells as he turned the lock. He
swung the door open and quickly stepped inside.
From the bottom of the stairwell Malcolm could only see that
the room appeared to be empty. Mrs. Russell wasn't at her desk. Out of the
corner of his eye he noticed that Dr. Lappe's door was partially open. There
was a peculiar odor in the room. Malcolm tossed the sandwich bags on top of
Walter's desk and slowly mounted the stairs.
He found the sources of the odor. As usual, Mrs. Russell had
been standing behind her desk when they entered. The blast from the machine gun
in the mailman's pouch had knocked her almost as far back as the coffeepot. Her
cigarette had dropped on her neck, singeing her flesh until the last millimeter
of tobacco and paper had oxidized. A strange dullness came over Malcolm as he
stared at the huddled flesh in the pool of blood. An automation, he slowly
turned and walked into Dr. Lappe's office.
Walter and Dr. Lappe had been going over invoices when they
heard strange coughing noises and the thump of Mrs. Russell's body hitting the
floor. Walter opened the door to help her pick up the dropped delivery (he
heard the buzzer and Mrs. Russell say, "What have you got for us
today?"). The last thing he saw was a tall, thin man holding an L-shaped
device. The postmortem revealed that Walter took a short burst, five rounds in
the stomach. Dr. Lappe saw the whole thing, but there was nowhere to run. His
body slumped against the far wall beneath a row of bloody diagonal holes.
Two of the men moved quietly upstairs, leaving the mailman
to guard the door. None of the other staff had heard a thing. Otto Skorzeny,
Hitler's chief commando, once demonstrated the effectiveness of a silenced
British sten gun by firing a clip behind a batch of touring generals. The
German officers never heard a thing, but they refused to copy the British
weapon, as the Third Reich naturally made better devices. These men were
satisfied with the sten. The tall man flung open Malcolm's door and found an
empty office. Ray Thomas was behind his desk on his knees picking up a dropped
pencil when the stocky man found him. Ray had time to scream, "Oh, my God,
no…" before his brain exploded.
Tamatha and Harold Martin heard Ray scream, but they had no
idea why. Almost simultaneously they opened their doors and ran to the head of
the stairs. All was quiet for a moment; then they heard the soft shuffle of
feet slowly climbing the stairs. The steps stopped, then a very faint metallic click, snap, twang jarred them from
their lethargy. They couldn't have known the exact source of the sound (a new
ammunition clip being inserted and the weapon being armed), but they
instinctively knew what it meant. They both ran into their rooms, slamming the
doors behind them.
Harold showed the most presence of mind. He locked his door
and dialed three digits before the stocky man kicked the door open and cut him
down.
Tamatha reacted on a different instinct. For years she
thought only a major emergency could get her to open a window. Now she knew
such an emergency was on her. She frantically rolled the window open, looking
for escape, looking for help, looking for anything. Dizzied by the height, she
took her glasses off and laid them on her desk. She heard Harold's door
splinter, a rattling cough, the thump, and fled again to the window. Her door
slowly opened.
For a long time nothing happened, then slowly Tamatha turned
to face the thin man. He hadn't fired for fear a slug would fly out the window,
hit something, and draw attention to the building. He would risk that only if
she screamed. She didn't. She saw only a blur, but she knew the blur was
motioning her away from the window. She moved slowly toward her desk. If I'm
going to die, she thought, I want to see. Her hand reached out for her glasses,
and she raised them to her eyes. The tall man waited until they were in place
and comprehension registered on her face. Then he squeezed the trigger, holding
it tight until the last shell from the full clip exploded, ejecting the spent casing
out of the side of the gun. The bullets kept Tamatha dancing, bouncing between
the wall and the filing cabinet, knocking her glasses off, disheveling her
hair. The thin man watched her riddled body slowly slide to the floor, then he
turned to join his stocky companion, who had just finished checking the rest of
the floor. They took their time going downstairs.
While the mailman maintained his vigil on the door, the
stocky man searched the basement. He found the coalbin door but thought nothing
of it. He should have, but then his error was partially due to Weatherby's
mistake. The stocky man did find and destroy the telephone switchbox. An
inoperative phone causes less alarm than a phone unanswered. The tall man
searched Heidegger's desk. The material he sought should have been in the third
drawer, left-hand side, and it was. He also took a manila envelope. He dumped a
handful of shell casings in the envelope with a small piece of paper he took
from his jacket pocket. He sealed the envelope and wrote on the outside. His
gloves made writing difficult, but he wanted to disguise his handwriting
anyway. The scrawl designated the envelope as a personal package for
"Lockenvar, Langley headquarters." The stocky man opened the camera
and exposed the film. The tall man contemptuously tossed the envelope on Mrs.
Russell's desk. He and his companions hung their guns from the straps inside
their coats, opened the door, and left as inconspicuously as they had come,
just as Malcolm finished his piece of cake.
* * *
Malcolm moved slowly from office to office, floor to floor.
Although his eyes saw, his mind didn't register. When he found the mangled body
that had once been Tamatha, the knowledge hit him. He stared for minutes,
trembling. Fear grabbed him, and he thought, I've got to get out of here. He
started running. He went all the way to the first floor before his mind took
over and brought him to a halt.
Obviously they've gone, he thought, or I'd be dead now. Who
"they" were never entered his mind. He suddenly realized his
vulnerability. My God, he thought, I have no gun, I couldn't even fight them if
they came back. Malcolm looked at Walter's body and the heavy automatic
strapped to the dead man's belt. Blood covered the gun. Malcolm couldn't bring
himself to touch it. He ran to Walter's desk. Walter kept a very special weapon
clipped in the leg space of his desk, a sawed-off 20-gauge shotgun. The weapon
held only one shell, but Walter often bragged how it saved his life at Chosen
Reservoir. Malcolm grabbed it by its pistol-like butt. He kept it pointed at
the closed door as he slowly side-stepped toward Mrs. Russell's desk. Walter
kept a revolver in her drawer, "just in case." Mrs. Russell, a widow,
had called it her "rape gun." "Not to fight them off," she
would say, "but to encourage them." Malcolm stuck the gun in his
belt, then picked up the phone.
Dead. He punched all the lines. Nothing.
I have to leave, he thought, I have to get help. He tried to
shove the shotgun under his jacket. Even sawed off, the gun was too long: the
barrel stuck out through the collar and bumped his throat. Reluctantly, he put
the shotgun back under Walter's desk, thinking he should try to leave
everything as he found it. After a hard swallow, he went to the door and looked
out the wide-angled peephole. The street was empty. The rain had stopped.
Slowly, standing well behind the wall, he opened the door. Nothing happened. He
stepped out on the stoop. Silence. With a bang he closed the door, quickly
walked through the gate and down the street, his eyes darting, hunting for
anything unusual. Nothing.
Malcolm headed straight for the corner phone. Each of the
four divisions of the CIA has an unlisted "panic number," a phone
number to be used only in the event of a major catastrophe, only if all other
channels of communication are unavailable. Penalty for misuse of the number can
be as stiff as expulsion from the service with loss of pay. Their panic number
is the one top secret every CIA employee from the highest cleared director to
the lowest cleared janitor knows and remembers.
The Panic Line is always manned by highly experienced
agents. They have to be sharp even though they seldom do anything. When a panic
call comes through, decisions must be made, quickly and correctly.
Stephen Mitchell was officer of the day manning ID's Panic
phone when Malcolm's call came through. Mitchell had been one of the best
traveling (as opposed to resident) agents in the CIA. For thirteen years he
moved from trouble spot to trouble spot, mainly in South America. Then in 1967
a double agent in Buenos Aires planted a plastic bomb under the driver's seat
in Mitchell's Simca. The double agent made an error: the explosion only blew
off Mitchell's legs.
The error caught the double agent in the form of a wire loop
tightened in Rio. The Agency, not wanting to waste a good man, shifted Mitchell
to the Panic Section.
Mitchell answered the phone after the first ring. When he
picked up the receiver a tape recorder came on and a trace automatically began.
"493-7282." All CIA telephones are answered by
their numbers.
"This is…" For a horrible second Malcolm forgot
his code name. He knew he had to give his department and section number (to
distinguish himself from other agents who might have the same code name), but
he couldn't remember his code name. He knew better than to use his real name.
Then he remembered. "This is Condor, Section 9, Department 17. We've been
hit."
"Are you on an Agency line?"
"I'm calling from an open phone booth a little ways
from… base. Our phones aren't working."
Shit, thought Mitchell, we have to use double talk. With his
free hand he punched the Alert button. At five different locations, three in
Washington, two in Langley, heavily armed men scurried to cars, turned on their
engines, and waited for instructions. "How bad?"
"Maximum, total. I'm the only one who…"
Mitchell cut him off. "Right. Do any civilians in the
area know?"
"I don't think so. Somehow it was done quietly."
"Are you damaged?"
"No."
"Are you armed?"
"Yes."
"Are there any hostiles in the area?"
Malcolm looked around. He remembered how ordinary the
morning had seemed. "I don't think so, but I can't be sure."
"Listen very closely. Leave the area, slowly, but get
your ass away from there, someplace safe. Wait an hour. After you're sure
you're clean, call again. That will be at 1:45. Do you understand?"
"Yes."
"OK, hang up now, and remember, don't lose your
head."
Mitchell broke the connection before Malcolm had taken the
phone from his ear.
After Malcolm hung up, he stood on the corner for a few
seconds, trying to formulate a plan. He knew he had to find someplace safe
where he could hide unnoticed for an hour, someplace close. Slowly, very
slowly, he turned and walked up the street. Fifteen minutes later he joined the
Iowa City Jaycees on their tour of the nation's Capitol building.
* * *
Even as Malcolm spoke to Mitchell, one of the largest and
most intricate government machines in the world began to grind. Assistants
monitoring Malcolm's call dispatched four cars from Washington security posts
and one car from Langley with a mobile medical team, all bound for Section 9,
Department 17. The squad leaders were briefed and established procedure via
radio as they homed in on the target. The proper Washington police precinct was
alerted to the possibility of an assistance request by "federal
enforcement officials." By the time Malcolm hung up, all D.C. area CIA
bases had received a hostile-action report. They activated special security
plans.
Within three minutes of the call all deputy directors were
notified, and within six minutes the director, who had been in conference with
the Vice-President, was personally briefed over a scrambled phone by Mitchell.
Within eight minutes all the other main organs of America's intelligence
community received news of a possible hostile action.
In the meantime Mitchell ordered all files pertaining to the
Society sent to his office. During a panic situation, the Panic officer of the
day automatically assumes awesome power. He virtually runs much of the entire
Agency until personally relieved by a deputy director. Only seconds after
Mitchell ordered the files, Records called him back.
"Sir, the computer check shows all primary files on
Section 9, Department 17, are missing."
"They're what?"
"Missing, sir."
"Then send me the secondary set, and God damn it, send
it under guard!" Mitchell slammed the phone down before the startled clerk
could reply. Mitchell grabbed another phone and connected immediately.
"Freeze the base," he ordered. Within seconds all exits from the
compound were sealed. Anyone attempting to leave or enter the area would have
been shot. Red lights flashed throughout the buildings. Special security teams
began clearing the corridors, ordering all those not engaged in Panic or Red
priority business to return to their base offices. Reluctance or even hesitance
to comply with the order meant a gun barrel in the stomach and handcuffs on the
wrists.
The door to the Panic Room opened just after Mitchell froze
the base. A large man strode firmly past the security guard without bothering
to return the cursory salute. Mitchell was still on the phone, so the man
settled down in a chair next to the second in command.
"What the hell is going on?" The man would
normally have been answered without question, but right now Mitchell was God.
The second looked at his chief. Mitchell, though still barking orders into the
phone, heard the demand. He nodded to his second, who in turn gave the big man
a complete synopsis of what had happened and what had been done. By the time
the second had finished, Mitchell was off the phone, using a soiled
handkerchief to wipe his brow.
The big man stirred in his chair. "Mitchell," he
said, "if it's all right with you, I think I'll stay around and give you a
hand. After all, I am head of Department 17."
"Thank you, sir," Mitchell replied, "I'll be
glad of any help you can give us."
The big man grunted and settled down to wait.
* * *
If you had been walking down Southeast A just behind the
Library of Congress at 1:09 on that cloudy Thursday afternoon, you would have
been startled by a sudden flurry of activity. Half a dozen men sprang out of
nowhere and converged on a three-story white building. Just before they reached
the door, two cars, one on each side of the road, double-parked almost in front
of the building. A man sat in the back seat of each car, peering intently at
the building and cradling something in his arms. The six men on foot went
through the gate together, but only one climbed the steps. He fiddled with a
large ring of keys and the lock. When the door clicked, he nodded to the
others. After throwing the door wide open and hesitating for an instant, the
six men poured inside, slamming the door behind them. A man got out of each
car. They slowly began to pace up and down in front of the building. As the
cars pulled away to park, the drivers both nodded at men standing on the
corners.
Three minutes later the door opened. A man left the building
and walked slowly toward the closest parked car. Once inside, he picked up a
phone. Within seconds he was talking to Mitchell.
"They were hit all right, hard." The man speaking
was Allan Newberry. He had seen combat in Vietnam, at the Bay of Pigs, in the
mountains of Turkey, dozens of alleys, dark buildings, and basements all over
the world, yet Mitchell could feel uneasy sickness in the clipped voice.
"How and how bad?" Mitchell was just beginning to
believe.
"Probably a two- to five-man team, no sign of forcible
entry. They must have used silenced machine guns of some sort or the whole town
would have heard. Six dead in the building, four men, two women. Most of them
probably didn't know what hit them. No signs of an extensive search, security
camera and film destroyed. Phones are dead, probably cut somewhere. A couple of
bodies will have to be worked on before identity can be definitely established.
Neat, clean, and quick. They knew what they were doing down to the last detail,
and they knew how to do it."
Mitchell waited until he was sure Newberry had finished.
"OK. This is beyond me. I'm going to hold definite action until somebody
upstairs orders it. Meantime you and your men sit tight. Nothing is to be
moved. I want that place frozen and sealed but good. Use whatever means you
must."
Mitchell paused, both to emphasize his meaning and to hope
he wasn't making a mistake. He had just authorized Newberry's team to do
anything, including premeditated, nondefensive kills, Stateside action without
prior clearance. Murder by whim, if they thought the whim might mean something.
The consequences of such a rare order could be very grave for all concerned.
Mitchell continued. "I'm sending out more men to cover the neighborhood as
additional security. I'll also send out a crime lab team, but they can only do
things that won't disturb the scene. They'll bring a communications setup, too.
Understand?"
"I understand. Oh, there's something a little peculiar
we've found."
Mitchell said, "Yes?"
"Our radio briefing said there was only one door. We
found two. Make any sense to you?"
"None," said Mitchell, "but nothing about
this whole thing makes sense. Is there anything else?"
"Just one thing." The voice grew colder.
"Some son of a bitch butchered a little girl on the third floor. He didn't
hit her, he butchered her." Newberry signed off.
"What now?" asked the big man.
"We wait," said Mitchell, leaning back in his
wheelchair. "We sit and wait for Condor to call."
At 1:40 Malcolm found a phone booth in the Capitol. With
change acquired from a bubbly teen-age girl he dialed the panic number. It
didn't even finish one complete ring.
"493-7282." The voice on the phone was tense.
"This is Condor, Section 9, Department 17. I'm in a
public phone booth, I don't think I was followed, and I'm pretty sure I can't
be heard."
"You've been confirmed. We've got to get you to
Langley, but we're afraid to let you come in solo. Do you know the Circus 3
theaters in the Georgetown district?"
"Yes."
"Could you be there in an hour?"
"Yes."
"OK. Now, who do you know at least by sight who's
stationed at Langley?"
Malcolm thought for a moment. "I had an instructor
code-named Sparrow IV."
"Hold on." Through priority use of the computer
and communications facilities, Mitchell verified Sparrow IV's existence and
determined that he was in the building. Two minutes later he said, "OK,
this is what is going to happen. Half an hour from now Sparrow IV and one other
man will park in a small alley behind the theaters. They'll wait exactly one
hour. That gives you thirty minutes leeway either direction. There are three
entrances to the alley you can take on foot. All three allow you to see anybody
in front of you before they see you. When you're sure you're clean, go down the
alley. If you see anything or anybody suspicious, if Sparrow IV and his partner
aren't there or somebody is with them, if a God damn pigeon is at their feet,
get your ass out of there, find someplace safe, and call in. Do the same if you
can't make it. OK?"
"OKahahaachoo!"
Mitchell almost shot out of his wheelchair. "What the
hell was that? Are you OK?"
Malcolm wiped the phone off. "Yes, sir, I'm fine.
Sorry, I have a cold. I know what to do."
"For the love of Christ." Mitchell hung up. He
leaned back in his chair. Before he could say anything, the big man spoke.
"Look here, Mitchell. If you have no objection, I'll
accompany Sparrow IV. The Department is my responsibility, and there's no young
tough around here who can carry off what might be a tricky situation any
better, tired old man as I may be."
Mitchell looked at the big, confident man across from him,
then smiled. "OK. Pick up Sparrow IV at the gate. Use your car. Have you
ever met Condor?"
The big man shook his head. "No, but I think I've seen
him. Can you supply a photo?"
Mitchell nodded and said, "Sparrow IV has one. Ordnance
will give you anything you want, though I suggest a hand gun. Any
preference?"
The big man walked toward the door. "Yes," he
said, looking back, "a .38 Special with silencer just in case we have to
move quietly."
"It'll be waiting in the car, complete with ammo.
Oh," said Mitchell, stopping the big man as he was halfway out of the
door, "thanks again, Colonel Weatherby."
The big man turned and smiled. "Think nothing of it,
Mitchell. After all, it's my job." He closed the door behind him and
walked toward his car. After a few steps he began to wheeze very softly.
Faulty execution of a winning
combination has lost many a game on the very brink of victory. In such cases a
player sees the winning idea, plays the winning sacrifice and then inverts the
order of his follow-up moves or misses the really clinching point of his
combination.
—Fred Reinfeld, The Complete Chess
Course
Chapter 3
Thursday Afternoon
Malcolm had little trouble finding a taxi, considering the
weather. Twenty minutes later he paid the driver two blocks from the Circus
theaters. Again he knew it was all-important that he stay out of sight. A few
minutes later he sat at a table in the darkest corner of a bar crowded with
men. The bar Malcolm chose is the most active male homosexual hangout in Washington.
Starting with the early lunch hour at eleven and running until well after
midnight, men of all ages, usually middle to upper middle class, fill the bar
to find a small degree of relaxation among their own kind. It's a happy as well
as a "gay" bar. Rock music blares, laughter drifts into the street.
The levity is strained, heavy with irony, but it's there.
Malcolm hoped he looked inconspicuous, one man in a bar
crowded with men. He nursed his tequila Collins, drinking it as slowly as he
dared, watching faces in the crowd for signs of recognition. Some of the faces
in the crowd watched him too.
No one in the bar noticed that only Malcolm's left hand
rested on the small table. Under the table his right hand held a gun, a gun he
pointed at anyone coming near him.
At 2:40 Malcolm jumped from his table to join a large group
leaving the bar. Once outside, he quickly walked away from the group. For
several minutes he crossed and recrossed Georgetown's narrow streets, carefully
watching the people around him. At three o'clock, satisfied he was clean, he
headed toward the Circus theaters.
* * *
Sparrow IV turned out to be a shaky, spectacled instructor
of governmental procedure. He had been given no choice concerning his role in
the adventure. He made it quite clear that this was not what he was hired for,
he most definitely objected, and he was very concerned about his wife and four
children. Mostly to shut him up, Ordnance dressed him in a bulletproof vest. He
wore the hot and heavy armor under his shirt. The canvas frustrated his
scratching attempts. He had no recollection of anyone called Condor or Malcolm;
he lectured Junior Officer Training classes by the dozen. The people at
Ordnance didn't care, but they listened anyway.
Weatherby briefed the drivers of the crash cars as they
walked toward the parking lot. He checked the short gun with the sausage-shaped
device and nodded his approval to the somber man from Ordnance. Ordinarily
Weatherby would have had to sign for the gun, but Mitchell's authority rendered
such procedures unnecessary. The Ordnance man helped Weatherby adjust a special
shoulder holster, handed him twenty-five extra rounds, and wished him luck.
Weatherby grunted as he climbed into his light blue sedan.
The three cars rolled out of Langley in close formation with
Weatherby's blue sedan in the middle position. Just as they exited from the
Beltway turnpike to enter Washington, the rear car "blew" a tire. The
driver "lost control" of his vehicle, and the car ended up across two
lanes of traffic. No one was hurt, but the accident blocked traffic for ten
minutes. Weatherby closely followed the other crash car as it turned and
twisted its way through the maze of Washington traffic. On a quiet residential
street in the city's south-west quadrant the crash car made a complete U-turn
and started back in the opposite direction. As it passed the blue sedan, the
driver flashed Weatherby the OK sign, then sped out of sight. Weatherby headed
toward Georgetown, checking for tails all the way.
Weatherby figured out his mistake. When he dispatched the
assassination team, he ordered them to kill everyone in the building. He had
said everyone, but he hadn't specified how many that was. His men had followed
orders, but the orders hadn't been complete enough to let them know one man was
missing. Why the man wasn't there Weatherby didn't know and he didn't care. If
he had known about the missing man, this Condor, he could have arranged a
satisfactory solution. He had made the mistake, so now he had to rectify it.
There was a chance Condor was harmless, that he wouldn't
remember his conversation with the Heidegger man, but Weatherby couldn't take
that chance. Heidegger questioned all the staff except Dr. Lappe. Those
questions could not be allowed to exist. Now one man knew about those
questions, so, like the others, that man must die even if he didn't realize
what he knew.
Weatherby's plan was simple, but extremely dangerous. As
soon as Condor appeared he would shoot him. Self-defense. Weatherby glanced at
the trembling Sparrow IV. An unavoidable side product. The big man had no
qualms concerning the instructor's pending death. The plan was fraught with
risks: Condor might be better with his weapon than anticipated, the scene might
be witnessed and later reported, the Agency might not believe his story and use
a guaranteed form of interrogation, Condor might turn himself in some other
way. A hundred things could go wrong. But no matter how high the risks,
Weatherby knew they were not the certainty that faced him should he fail. He
might be able to escape the Agency and the rest of the American intelligence
network. There are several ways, ways that have been successfully used before.
Such things were Weatherby's forte. But he knew he would never escape the
striking-looking man with strange eyes. That man never failed when he acted
directly. Never. He would act directly against Weatherby the dangerous bungler,
Weatherby the threat. This Weatherby knew, and it made him wheeze painfully. It
was this knowledge that made any thought of escape or betrayal absurd.
Weatherby had to account for his error. Condor had to die.
Weatherby drove through the alley slowly, then turned around
and came back, parking the car next to some garbage cans behind the theaters.
The alley was empty just as Mitchell said it would be. Weatherby doubted if
anyone would enter it while they were there: Washingtonians tend to avoid
alleys. He knew Mitchell would arrange for the area to be free of police so
that uniforms wouldn't frighten Condor. That was fine with Weatherby. He
motioned for Sparrow IV to get out. They leaned against the car, prominent and
visibly alone. Then, like any good hunter staging an ambush, Weatherby blanked
his mind to let his senses concentrate.
Malcolm saw them standing there before they knew he was in
the alley. He watched them very carefully from a distance of about sixty paces.
He had a hard time controlling sneezes, but he managed to stay silent. After he
was certain they were alone, he stepped from behind the telephone pole and
began to walk toward them. His relief built with every step.
Weatherby spotted Malcolm immediately. He stepped away from
the car, ready. He wanted to be very, very sure, and sixty paces is only a fair
shot for a silenced pistol. He also wanted to be out of Sparrow IV's reach.
Take them one at a time, he thought.
Recognition sprang on Malcolm twenty-five paces from the two
men, five paces sooner than Weatherby anticipated any action. A picture of a
man in a blue sedan parked just up from the Society in the morning rain flashed
through Malcolm's mind. The man in that car and one of the men now standing in
front of him were the same. Something was wrong, something was very wrong.
Malcolm stopped, then slowly backed up. Almost unconsciously he tugged at the
gun in his belt.
Weatherby knew something was wrong, too. His quarry had
quite unexpectedly stopped short of the trap, was now fleeing, and was probably
preparing an aggressive defense. Malcolm's unexpected actions forced Weatherby
to abandon his original plan and react to a new situation. While he quickly
drew his own weapon, Weatherby briefly noted Sparrow IV, frozen with fright and
bewilderment. The timid instructor still posed no threat.
Weatherby was a veteran of many situations requiring rapid
action. Malcolm's pistol barrel had just cleared his belt when Weatherby fired.
A pistol, while effective, can be a difficult weapon to use
under field conditions, even for an experienced veteran. A pistol equipped with
a silencer increases this difficulty, for while the silencer allows the handler
to operate quietly, it cuts down on his efficiency. The bulk at the end of the
barrel is an unaccustomed weight requiring aim compensation by the user.
Ballistically, a silencer cuts down on the bullet's velocity. The silencer may
affect the bullet's trajectory. A siencer-equipped pistol is cumbersome,
difficult to draw and fire quickly.
All these factors worked against Weatherby. Had he not been
using a silenced pistol— even though his quarry's retreat forced him to take
time to revise his plans— there would have been no contest. As it was, the
pistol's bulk slowed his draw. He lost accuracy attempting to regain speed. The
veteran killer tried for the difficult but definite head shot, but he
overcompensated. Milliseconds after the soft plop!, a heavy chunk of lead cut through the hair hanging over
Malcolm's left ear and whined off to sink in the Potomac.
Malcolm had only fired one pistol in his life, a friend's
.22 target model. All five shots missed the running gopher. He fired Mrs.
Russell's gun from the waist, and a deafening roar echoed down the alley before
he knew he had pulled the trigger.
When a man is shot with a .357 magnum he doesn't grab a neat
little red hole in his body and slide slowly to the ground. He goes down hard.
At twenty-five paces the effect is akin to being hit by a truck. Malcolm's
bullet smashed through Weatherby's left thigh. The force of the blast
splattered a large portion of Weatherby's leg over the alley; it flipped him
into the air and slammed him face down in the road.
Sparrow IV looked incredulously at Malcolm. Slowly Malcolm
turned toward the little instructor, bringing the gun into line with the man's
quivering stomach.
"He was one of them!" Malcolm was panting though
he hadn't exerted himself. "He was one of them!" Malcolm slowly
backed away from the speechless instructor. When he reached the edge of the
alley, Malcolm turned and ran.
Weatherby groaned, fighting off the shock of the wound.
The pain hadn't set in. He was a very tough man, but it took
everything he had to raise his arm. He had somehow held on to the gun.
Miraculously, his mind stayed clear. Very carefully he aimed and fired. Another
plop!, and a bullet shattered on the
theater wall, but not before it tore through the throat of Sparrow IV,
instructor of governmental procedure, husband, father of four. As the body
crumpled against the car, Weatherby felt a strange sense of elation. He wasn't
dead yet, Condor had vanished again, and there would be no bullets for
Ballistics to use in determining who shot whom. There was still hope. He passed
out.
A police car found the two men. It took them a long time to
respond to the frightened shopkeeper's call, because all the Georgetown units
had been sent to check out a sniper report. The report turned out to be from a
crank.
* * *
Malcolm ran four blocks before he realized how conspicuous
he was. He slowed down, turned several corners, then hailed a passing taxi to
downtown Washington.
Sweet Jesus, Malcolm thought, he was one of them. He was one
of them. The Agency must not have known. He had to get to a phone. He had to
call… Fear set in. Suppose, just suppose the man in the alley wasn't the only
double. Suppose he had been sent there by a man who knew what he was. Suppose
the man at the other end of the Panic Line was also a double.
Malcolm quit his suppositions to deal with the immediate
problem of survival. Until he thought it out he wouldn't dare call in. And they
would be looking for him. They would have looked for him even before the
shooting, the only survivor of the section, they… But he wasn't! The thought
raced through his mind. He wasn't the only survivor of the section. Heidegger!
Heidegger was sick, home in bed, sick! Malcolm searched his brain. Address,
what did Heidegger say his address was? Malcolm had heard Heidegger tell Dr.
Lappe his address was… Mount Royal Arms!
Malcolm explained his problem to the cabby. He was on his
way to pick up a blind date, but he had forgotten the address. All he knew was
she lived in the Mount Royal Arms. The cabby, always eager to help young love,
called his dispatcher, who gave him the address in the northwest quadrant. When
the cabby let him out in front of the aging building, Malcolm gave him a dollar
tip.
Heidegger's name tape was stuck next to 413. Malcolm buzzed.
No return buzz, no query over the call box. While he buzzed again, an uneasy
but logical assumption grew in his mind. Finally he pushed three other buzzers.
No answer came, so he punched a whole row. When the jammed call box squealed,
he yelled, "Special delivery!" The door buzzer rang and he ran
inside.
No one answered his knock at Apartment 413, but by then he
didn't really expect an answer. He got on his knees and looked at the lock. If
he was right, only a simple spring night lock was on. In dozens of books he'd
read and in countless movies, the hero uses a small piece of stiff plastic and
in a few seconds a locked door springs open. Plastic— where could he find a
piece of stiff plastic? After several moments of frantic pocket slapping, he
opened his wallet and removed his laminated CIA identification card. The card
certified he was an employee of Tentrex Industries, Inc., giving relevant
information regarding his appearance and identity. Malcolm had always liked the
two photos of himself, one profile, one full face.
For twenty minutes Malcolm sneezed, grunted, pushed, pulled,
jiggled, pleaded, threatened, shook, and finally hacked at the lock with his
card. The plastic lamination finally split, shooting his ID card through the
crack and into the locked room.
Frustration turned to anger. Malcolm relieved his cramped
knees by standing. If nobody has bothered me up till now, he thought, a little
more noise won't make much difference. Backed with the fury, fear, and
frustration of the day, Malcolm smashed his foot against the door. Locks and
doors in the Mount Royal Arms are not of the finest quality. The management
leans toward cheap rent, and the building construction is similarly inclined.
The door of 413 flew inward, bounced off its doorstop, and was caught on the
return swing by Malcolm. He shut the door a good deal more quietly than he had
opened it. He picked his ID card out of the splinters, then crossed the room to
the bed and what lay on it.
Since time forestalled any pretense, they hadn't bothered to
be gentle with Heidegger. If Malcolm had lifted the pajama top, he would have
seen the mark a low-line punch leaves if the victim's natural tendency to
bruise is arrested by death. The corpse's face was blackish blue, a state
induced by, among other things, strangulation. The room stank from the corpse's
involuntary discharge.
Malcolm looked at the beginning-to-bloat body. He knew very
little about organic medicine, but he knew that this state of decomposition is
not reached in a couple of hours. Therefore Heidegger had been killed before
the others. "They" hadn't come here after they discovered him missing
from work but before they hit the building. Malcolm didn't understand.
Heidegger's right pajama sleeve lay on the floor. Malcolm
didn't think that type of tear would be made in a fight. He flipped the covers
back to look at Heidegger's arm. On the underside of the forearm he found a
small bruise, the kind a tiny bug would make. Or, thought Malcolm, remembering
his trips to the student health service, a clumsily inserted hypodermic. They
shot him full of something, probably to make him talk. About what? Malcolm had
no idea. He began to search the room when he remembered about fingerprints.
Taking his handkerchief from his pocket, he wiped everything he remembered
touching, including the outside of the door. He found a pair of dusty handball
gloves on the cluttered dresser. Too small, but they covered his fingers.
After the bureau drawers he searched the closet. On the top
shelf he found an envelope full of money, fifty- and one-hundred-dollar bills.
He didn't take the time to count it, but he estimated that there must be at
least ten thousand dollars.
He sat on the clothes-covered chair. It didn't make sense.
An ex-alcoholic, an accountant who lectured on the merits of mutual funds, a
man frightened of muggers, keeping all that cash stashed in his closet. It
didn't make sense. He looked at corpse. At any rate, he thought, Heidegger
won't need it now. Malcolm put the envelope inside his shorts. After a last
quick look around, he cautiously opened the door, walked down the stairs, and
caught a downtown bus at the corner.
Malcolm knew his first problem would be evading his
pursuers. By now there would be at least two "they"s after him: the
Agency and whatever group hit the Society. They all knew what he looked like,
so his first move would have to be to change his appearance.
The sign in the barbershop said "No Waiting," and
for once advertising accurately reflected its product. Malcolm took off his
jacket facing the wall. He slipped the gun inside the bundle before he sat
down. His eyes never left the jacket during the whole haircut.
"What do you want, young fellow?" The graying
barber snipped his scissors gleefully.
Malcolm felt no regrets. He knew how much the haircut might
mean. "A short butch, just a little longer than a crew cut, long enough so
it will lay down."
"Say, that'll be quite a change." The barber
plugged in an electric clipper.
"Yeah."
"Say, young man, are you interested in baseball? I sure
am. I read an article in the Post
today about the Orioles and spring training, and the way this fellow figures
it…"
After the haircut Malcolm looked in the mirror. He hadn't
seen that person for five years.
His next stop was Sunny's Surplus. Malcolm knew a good
disguise starts with the right attitude, but he also knew good props were
invaluable. He searched through the entire stock until he found a used field
jacket with the patches intact that fitted reasonably well. The name patch
above the left pocket read "Evans." On the left shoulder was a
tricolored eagle patch with the word "Airborne" in gold letters on a
black background. Malcolm knew he had just become a veteran of the 101st
Airborne Division. He bought and changed into a pair of blue stretch jeans and
an outrageously priced set of used jump boots ("$15, guaranteed to have
seen action in Vietnam"). He also bought underwear, a cheap pullover,
black driving gloves, socks, a safety razor, and a toothbrush. When he left the
store with his bundle under his arm, he pretended he had a spike rammed up his
ass. His steps were firm and well measured. He looked cockily at every girl he
passed. After five blocks he needed a rest, so he entered one of Washington's
countless Hot Shoppe restaurants.
"Can Ah have a cup of caufee?" The waitress didn't
bat an eye at Malcolm's newly acquired southern accent. She brought him his
coffee. Malcolm tried to relax and think.
Two girls were in the booth behind Malcolm. A life-time
habit made him listen to their conversation.
"So you're not going anywhere for your vacation?"
"No, I'm just going to stay home. For two weeks I'll
shut the world out."
"You'll go crazy."
"Maybe, but don't try calling me for a progress report,
because I probably won't even answer the phone."
The other girl laughed. "What if it's a hunk of man
who's just pining for companionship?"
The other girl snorted. "Then he'll just have to wait
for two weeks. I'm going to relax."
"Well, it's your life. Sure you won't have dinner
tonight?"
"No, really, thanks, Anne. I'm just going to finish my
coffee and then drive home, and starting right now I won't have to hurry for
another two weeks."
"Well, Wendy, have fun." Thighs squeaked across
plastic. The girl called Anne walked toward the door, right past Malcolm. He
caught a glimpse of a tremendous pair of legs, blond hair, and a firm profile
vanishing in the crowd. He sat very still, sniffling occasionally, nervous as
hell, for he had found the answer to his shelter problem.
It took the girl called Wendy five minutes to finish her
coffee. When she left she didn't even look at the man sitting behind her. She
couldn't have seen much anyway, as his face was hidden behind a menu. Malcolm
followed her as soon as she paid and started out the door. He threw his money
on the counter as he left.
All he could tell from behind was that she was tall, thin
but not painfully skinny like Tamatha, had short black hair, and only medium
legs. Christ, he thought, why couldn't she have been the blond? Malcolm's luck
held, for the girl's car was in the back section of a crowded parking lot. He
casually followed her past the fat attendant leering from behind a battered
felt hat. Just as the girl unlocked the door of a battered Corvair, Malcolm
yelled, "Wendy! My God, what are you doing here?"
Startled, but not alarmed, the girl looked up at the smiling
figure in the army jacket walking toward her.
"Are you talking to me?" She had narrow-set brown
eyes, a wide mouth, a little nose, and high cheekbones. A perfectly ordinary
face. She wore little or no makeup.
"I shore am. Don't you remember me, Wendy?" He was
only three steps from her now.
"I… I don't think so." She noticed that his one
hand held a package and his other was inside his jacket.
Malcolm stood beside her now. He set the package on the roof
of her car and casually placed his left hand behind her head. He tightly
grabbed her neck, bending her head down until she saw the gun in his other
hand.
"Don't scream or make any quick moves or I'll splatter
you all over the street. Understand?" Malcolm felt the girl shiver, but
she nodded quickly. "Now get in the car and unlock the other door. This
thing shoots through windows and I won't even hesitate." The girl quickly
climbed into the driver's seat, leaned over, and unlocked the other door. Malcolm
slammed her door shut, picked up his package, slowly walked around the car, and
got in.
"Please don't hurt me." Her voice was much softer
than in the restaurant.
"Look at me." Malcolm had to clear his throat.
"I'm not going to hurt you, not if you do exactly as I say, I don't want
your money, I don't want to rape you. But you must do exactly as I say. Where
do you live?"
"In Alexandria."
"We're going to your apartment. You'll drive. If you
have any ideas about signaling for help, forget them. If you try, I'll shoot. I
might get hurt, but you'll be dead. It's not worth it. OK?" The girl
nodded. "Let's go."
The drive to Virginia was tense. Malcolm never took his eyes
off the girl. She never took her eyes off the road. Just after the Alexandria
exit she pulled into a small courtyard surrounded by apartment units.
"Which one is yours?"
"The first one. I have the top two floors. A man lives
in the basement."
"You're doing just fine. Now, when we go up the walk,
just pretend you're taking a friend to your place. Remember, I'm right behind
you."
They got out and walked the few steps to the building. The
girl shook and had trouble unlocking the door, but she finally made it. Malcolm
followed her in, gently closing the door behind him.
I have treated this game in great
detail because I think it is important for the student to see what he's up
against, and how he ought to go about solving the problems of practical play.
You may not be able to play the defense and counterattack this well, but the
game sets a worthwhile goal for you to achieve: how to fight back in a position
where your opponent has greater mobility and better prospects.
—Fred Reinfeld, The Complete Chess
Course
Chapter 4
Thursday Evening-Friday Morning
"I don't believe you." The girl sat on the couch,
her eyes glued to Malcolm. She was not as frightened as she had been, but her
heart felt as if it was breaking ribs.
Malcolm sighed. He had been sitting across from the girl for
an hour. From what he found in her purse, he knew she was Wendy Ross, twenty-seven
years old, had lived and driven in Carbondale, Illinois, distributed 135 pounds
on her five-foot-ten frame (he was sure that was an overestimated lie),
regularly gave Type O Positive blood to the Red Cross, was a card-carrying user
of the Alexandria Public Library and a member of the University of Southern
Illinois Alumni Association, and was certified to receive and deliver summonses
for her employers, Bechtel, Barber, Sievers, Holloron, and Muckleston. From
what he read on her face, he knew she was frightened and telling the truth when
she said she didn't believe him. Malcolm didn't blame her, as he really didn't
believe his story either, and he knew it was true.
"Look," he said, "if what I said wasn't true,
why would I try to convince you it was?"
"I don't know."
"Oh, Jesus!" Malcolm paced the room. He could tie
her up and still use her place, but that was risky. Besides, she could be
invaluable. He had an inspiration in the middle of a sneeze.
"Look," he said, wiping his upper lip,
"suppose I could at least prove to you I was with the CIA. Then would you
believe me?"
"I might." A new look crossed the girl's face.
"OK, look at this." Malcolm sat down beside her.
He felt her body tense, but she took the mutilated piece of paper.
"What's this?"
"It's my CIA identification card. See, that's me with
long hair."
Her voice was cold. "It says Tentrex Industries, not
CIA. I can read, you know." He could see she regretted her inflection
after she said it, but she didn't apologize.
"I know what it says!" Malcolm grew more impatient
and nervous. His plan might not work. "Do you have a D.C. phone
book?"
The girl nodded toward an end table. Malcolm crossed the
room, picked up the huge book, and flung it at the girl. Her reactions were so
keyed she caught it without any trouble. Malcolm shouted at her, "Look in
there for Tentrex Industries. Anywhere! White pages, yellow pages, anywhere.
The card gives a phone number and an address on Wisconsin Avenue, so it should
be in the book. Look!"
The girl looked, then she looked again. She closed the book
and stared at Malcolm. "So you've got an ID card for a place that doesn't
exist. What does that prove?"
"Right!" Malcolm crossed the room excitedly,
bringing the phone with him. The cord barely reached. "Now," he said,
very secretively, "look up the Washington number for the Central
Intelligence Agency. The numbers are the same."
The girl opened the book again and turned the pages. For a
long time she sat puzzled, then with a new look and a questioning voice she
said, "Maybe you checked this out before you made the card, just for times
like this."
Shit, thought Malcolm. He let all the air out of his lungs,
took a deep breath, and started again. "OK, maybe I did, but there's one
way to find out. Call that number."
"It's after five," said the girl. "If no one
answers am I supposed to believe you until morning?"
Patiently, calmly, Malcolm explained to her. "You're
right. If Tentrex is a real company, it's closed for the day. But CIA doesn't
close. Call that number and ask for Tentrex." He handed her the phone.
"One thing. I'll be listening, so don't do anything wrong. Hang up when I
tell you."
The girl nodded and made the call. Three rings.
"WE4-3926."
"May I have Tentrex Industries, please?" The
girl's voice was very dry.
"I'm sorry," said a soft voice. A faint click came
over the line. "Everyone at Tentrex has gone for the day. They'll be back
in the morning. May I ask who is calling and what the nature of your
business…"
Malcolm broke the connection before the trace had a chance
to even get a general fix. The girl slowly replaced the receiver. For the first
time she looked directly at Malcolm. "I don't know if I believe everything
you say," she said, "but I think I believe some of it."
"One final piece of proof." Malcolm took the gun
out of his pants and laid it carefully in her lap. He walked across the room
and sat in the beanbag chair. His palms were damp, but it was better to take
the risk now than later. "You've got the gun. You could shoot me at least
once before I got to you. There's the phone. I believe in you enough to think
you believe me. Call anybody you want. Police, CIA, FBI, I don't care. Tell
them you've got me. But I want you to know what might happen if you do. The
wrong people might get the call. They might get here first. If they do, we're
both dead."
For a long time the girl sat still, looking at the heavy gun
in her lap. Then, in a soft voice Malcolm had to strain to hear, she said,
"I believe you."
She suddenly burst into activity. She stood up, laid the gun
on the table and paced the room. "I… don't know what I can do to help you,
but I'll try. You can stay here in the extra bedroom. Umm." She looked
toward the small kitchen and meekly said, "I could make something to
eat."
Malcolm grinned, a genuine smile he thought he had lost.
"That would be wonderful. Could you do one thing for me?"
"Anything, anything, I'll do anything." Wendy's
nerves unwound as she realized she might live.
"Could I use your shower? The hair down my back is
killing me."
She grinned at him and they both laughed. She showed him the
bathroom upstairs and provided him with soap, shampoo, and towels. She didn't
say a word when he took the gun with him. As soon as she left him he tiptoed to
the top of the stairs. No sound of a door opening, no telephone dialing. When
he heard drawers opening and closing, silverware rattling, he went back to the
bathroom, undressed, and climbed into the shower.
Malcolm stayed in the shower for thirty minutes, letting the
soft pellets of water drive freshness through his body. The steam cleared his
sinuses, and by the time he shut off the water he felt almost human. He changed
into his new pullover and fresh underwear. He automatically looked in the
mirror to straighten his hair. It was so short he did it with two strokes of
his hand.
The stereo was playing as he came down the stairs. He
recognized the album as Vince Guaraldi's score for Black Orpheus. The song was "Cast Your Fate to the Wind."
He had the album too, and told her so as they sat down to eat.
During green salad she told Malcolm about small-town life in
Illinois. Between bites of frozen German beans he heard about life at Southern
Illinois University. Mashed potatoes were mixed with a story concerning an
almost fiancé. Between chunks of the jiffy-cooked Swiss steak he learned how
drab it is to be a legal secretary for a stodgy corporate law firm in
Washington. There was a lull for Sara Lee cherry covered cheesecake. As she
poured coffee she summed it all up with, "It's really been pretty dull. Up
till now, of course."
During dishes he told her why he hated his first name. She
promised never to use it. She threw a handful of suds at him, but quickly wiped
them off.
After dishes he said good night and trudged up the stairs to
the bathroom. He put his contact lenses in his portable carrying case (what I
wouldn't give for my glasses and soaking case, he thought). He brushed his
teeth, crossed the hall to a freshly made bed, stuck a precautionary
handkerchief under his pillow, laid the gun on the night stand, and went to
sleep.
She came to him shortly after midnight. At first he thought
he was dreaming, but her heavy breathing and the heat from her body were too
real. His first fully awake thought noted that she had just showered. He could
faintly smell bath powder mingling with the sweet odor of sex. He rolled on his
side, pulling her eager body against him. They found each other's mouth. Her
tongue pushed through his lips, searching. She was tremendously excited. He had
a hard time untangling himself from her arms so he could strip off his
underwear. By now their faces were wet from each other. Naked at last, he
rolled her over on her back, pulling his hand slowly up the inside of her
thigh, delicately trailing his fingers across rhythmically flowing hips, up across
her flat, heaving stomach to her large, erect nipples. His fingers closed on
one small breast, easily gathering the mound of flesh into his hand. From out
of nowhere he thought of the girl who walked past the Society's building: she
had such fine, large breasts. He softly squeezed his hand. Wendy groaned loudly
and pulled his head to her chest, his lips to her straining nipples. As his
mouth slowly caressed her breasts, he ran his hand down, down to the wet fire
between her legs. When he touched her she sucked in air, softly but firmly
arching her back. She found him, and a second later softly moaned, "Now,
please now!" He mounted her, clumsily as first-time lovers do. They
pressed together. She tried to cover every inch of her body with him. His hard
thrusts spread fire through her body. She ran her hands down his back, and just
before they exploded he felt her fingernails digging into his buttocks, pulling
him ever deeper.
They lay quietly together for half an hour, then they began
again, slowly and more carefully, but with a greater intensity. Afterwards, as
she lay cradled on his chest, she spoke. "You don't have to love me. I
don't love you, I don't think so anyway. But I want you, and I need you."
Malcolm said nothing, but he drew her closer. They slept.
Other people didn't get to bed that night. When Langley
heard the reports of the Weatherby shooting, already frazzled nerves frazzled
more. Crash cars full of very determined men beat the amubulance to the alley.
Washington police complained to their superiors about "unidentified men
claiming to be federal officers" questioning witnesses. A clash between
two branches of government was averted by the entrance of a third. Three more
official-looking cars pulled into the neighborhood. Two very serious men in
pressed white shirts and dark suits pushed their way through the milling crowd
to inform commanders of the other departments that the FBI was now officially
in charge. The "unidentified federal officers" and the Washington
police checked with their headquarters and both were told not to push the
issue.
The FBI entered the case when the powers-that-were adopted a
working assumption of espionage. The National Security Act of 1947 states,
"The agency [CIA] shall have no police, subpoena, law-enforcement powers,
or internal security functions." The events of the day most definitely
fell under the heading of internal subversive activities, activities that are
the domain of the FBI. Mitchell held off informing the sister agency of details
for as long as he dared, but eventually a deputy director yielded to pressure.
But the CIA would not be denied the right to investigate
assaults on its agents, no matter where the assualts occurred. The Agency has a
loophole through which many questionable activities funnel. The loophole,
Section 5 of the Act, allows the Agency to perform "such other functions
and duties related to intelligence affecting the national security as the
National Security Council may from time to time direct." The Act also
grants the Agency the power to question people inside the country. The
directors of the Agency concluded that the extreme nature of the situation
warranted direct action by the Agency. This action could and would continue
until halted by a direct order from the National Security Council. In a very
polite but pointed note they so informed the FBI, thanking them, of course, for
their cooperation and expressing gratitude for any future help.
The Washington police were left with one corpse and a
gunshot victim who had disappeared to an undisclosed hospital in Virginia,
condition serious, prognosis uncertain. They were not pleased or placated by
assurances from various federal officers, but they were unable to pursue
"their" case.
The jurisdictional mishmash tended to work itself out in the
field, where departmental rivalry meant very little compared to dead men. The
agents in charge of operations for each department agreed to coordinate their
efforts. By evening one of the most extensive man hunts in Washington's history
began to unfold, with Malcolm as the object of activity. By morning the hunters
had turned up a good deal, but they had no clues to Malcolm's whereabouts.
This did little to brighten a bleak morning after for the
men who sat around a table in a central Washington office. Most of them had
been up until very late the night before, and most of them were far from happy.
The liaison group included all of the CIA deputy directors and representatives from
every intelligence group in the country. The man at the head of the table was
the deputy director in charge of Intelligence Division. Since the crisis
occurred in his division, he had been placed in charge of the investigation. He
summed up the facts for the grim men he faced.
"Eight Agency people dead, one wounded, and one, a
probable double, missing. Again, we have only a tentative— and I must say
doubtful— explanation of why."
"What makes you think the note the killers left is a
fake?" The man who spoke wore the uniform of the United States Navy.
The Deputy Director sighed. The Captain always had to have
things repeated. "We're not saying it's a fake, we only think so. We think
it's a ruse, an attempt to blame the Czechs for the killings. Sure, we hit one
of their bases in Prague, but for tangible, valuable intelligence. We only
killed one man. Now, they go in for many things, but melodramatic revenge isn't
one of them. Nor is leaving notes on the scene neatly explaining everything.
Especially when it gains them nothing. Nothing."
"Ah, may I ask a question or two, Deputy?"
The Deputy leaned forward, immediately intent. "Of
course, sir."
"Thank you." The man who spoke was small and
delicately old. To strangers he inevitably appeared to be a kindly old uncle
with a twinkle in his eye. "Just to refresh my memory— stop me if I'm
wrong— the one in the apartment, Heidegger, had sodium pentothal in his
blood?"
"That's correct, sir." The Deputy strained, trying
to remember if he had forgotten any detail in the briefing.
"Yet none of the others were 'questioned,' as far as we
can tell. Very strange. They came for him in the night, before the others.
Killed shortly before dawn. Yet your investigation puts our boy Malcolm at his
apartment that afternoon after Weatherby was shot. You say there is nothing to
indicate Heidegger was a double agent?
No expenditures beyond his income, no signs of outside wealth,
no reported tainted contacts, no blackmail vulnerability?"
"Nothing, sir."
"Any signs of mental instability?" CIA personnel
are among the highest groups in the nation for incidence of mental illness.
"None, sir. Excepting his former alcoholism, he appeared
to be normal, though somewhat reclusive."
"Yes, so I read. Investigation of the others reveal
anything out of the ordinary?"
"Nothing, sir."
"Would you do me a favor and read what Weatherby said
to the doctors? By the way, how is he?"
"He's doing better, sir. The doctors say he'll live,
but they are taking his leg off this morning." The Deputy shuffled papers
until he found the one he sought. "Here it is. Now, you must remember he
has been unconscious most of the time, but once he woke up, looked at the
doctors, and said, 'Malcolm shot me. He shot both of us. Get him, hit him.'
"
There was a stir at the end of the table and the Navy
captain leaned forward in his chair. In his heavy, slurred voice he said,
"I say we find that son of a bitch and blast him out of whatever rat hole
he ran into!"
The old man chuckled. "Yes. Well, I quite agree we must
find our wayward Condor. But I do think it would be a pity if we 'blasted' him
before he told us why he shot poor Weatherby. Indeed, why anybody was shot. Do you
have anything else for us, Deputy?"
"No, sir," said the Deputy, stuffing papers into
his briefcase. "I think we've covered everything. You have all the
information we do. Thank you all for coming."
As the men stood to leave, the old man turned to a colleague
and said quietly, "I wonder why." Then with a smile and a shake of
his head he left the room.
* * *
Malcolm woke up only when Wendy's caresses became impossible
for even a sick man to ignore. Her hands and mouth moved all over his body, and
almost before he knew what was happening she mounted him and again he felt her
fluttering warmth turn to fire. Afterwards, she looked at him for a long time,
lightly touching his body as if exploring an unseen land. She touched his
forehead and frowned.
"Malcolm, do you feel OK?"
Malcolm had no intention of being brave. He shook his head
and forced a raspy "No" from his throat. The one word seemed to fuel
the hot vise closing around his throat. Talking was out for the day.
"You're sick!" Wendy grabbed his lower jaw.
"Let me see!" she ordered, and forced his mouth open. "My God,
it's red down there!" She let go of Malcolm and started to climb out of
bed. "I'm going to call a doctor."
Malcolm caught her arm. She turned to him with a fearful
look, then smiled. "It's OK. I have a friend whose husband is a doctor. He
drives by here every day on his way to a clinic in D.C. I don't think he's left
yet. If he hasn't, I'll ask him to stop by to see my sick friend." She
giggled. "You don't have to worry. He won't tell a soul because he'll
think he's keeping another kind of secret. OK?"
Malcolm looked at her for a second, then let go of her arm
and nodded. He didn't care if the doctor brought Sparrow IV's friend with him.
All he wanted was relief.
The doctor turned out to be a paunchy middle-aged man who
spoke little. He poked and prodded Malcolm, took his temperature, and looked
down his throat so long Malcolm thought he would throw up. The doctor finally
looked up and said, "You've got a mild case of strep throat, my boy."
He looked at an anxious Wendy hovering nearby. "Nothing to worry about,
really. We'll fix him up." Malcolm watched the doctor fiddle with
something in his bag. When he turned toward Malcolm there was a hypodermic
needle in his hand. "Roll over and pull your shorts down."
A picture of a limp, cold arm with a tiny puncture flashed
through Malcolm's mind. He froze.
"For Christ's sake, it won't hurt that much. It's only
penicillin."
After giving Malcolm his shot, the doctor turned to Wendy.
"Here," he said, handing her a slip of paper. "Get this filled
and see that he takes them. He'll need at least a day's rest." The doctor
smiled as he leaned close to Wendy. He whispered. "And Wendy, I do mean
total rest." He laughed all the way to the door. On the porch, he turned
to her and slyly said, "Whom do I bill?"
Wendy smiled shyly and handed him twenty dollars. The doctor
started to speak, but Wendy cut his protest short. "He can affort it. He—
we— really appreciate you coming over."
"Hmph," snorted the doctor sarcastically, "he
should. I'm late for my coffee break." He paused to look at her. "You
know, he's the kind of prescription I've thought you needed for a long
time." With a wave of his hand he was gone.
By the time Wendy got upstairs, Malcolm was asleep. She
quietly left the apartment. She spent the morning shopping with the list
Malcolm and she had composed while waiting for the doctor. Besides filling the
prescription, she bought Malcolm several pairs of underwear, socks, some shirts
and pants, a jacket, and four different paperbacks, since she didn't know what
he liked to read. She carted her bundles home in time to make lunch. She spent
a quiet afternoon and evening, occasionally checking on her charge. She smiled
all day long.
* * *
Supervision of America's large and sometimes cumbersome
intelligence community has classically posed the problem of sed quis custodiet ipsos Custodes: who guards the guardians? In
addition to the internal checks existing independently in each agency, the
National Security Act of 1947 created the National Security Council, a group
whose composition varies with each change of presidential administration. The
Council always includes the President and Vice-President and usually includes
major cabinet members. The Council's basic duty is to oversee the activities of
the intelligence agencies and to make policy decisions guiding those activities.
But the members of the National Security Council are very
busy men with demanding duties besides overseeing a huge intelligence network.
Council members by and large do not have the time to devote to intelligence
matters, so most decisions about the intelligence community are made by a
smaller Council "subcommittee" known as the Special Group. Insiders
often refer to the Special Group as the "54/12 Group," so called
because it was created by Secret Order 54/12 early in the Eisenhower years. The
54/12 Group is virtually unknown outside the intelligence community, and even
there only a handful of men are aware of its existence.
Composition of the 54/12 Group also varies with each
administration. Its membership generally includes the director of the CIA, the
Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs or his deputy, and the Secretary
and Deputy Secretary of Defense. In the Kennedy and early Johnson
administrations the presidential representative and key man on the 54/12 Group
was McGeorge Bundy. The other members were McCone, McNamara, Roswell Gilpatric
(Deputy Secretary of Defense), and U. Alexis Johnson (Deputy Under Secretary of
State for Political Affairs).
Overseeing the American intelligence community poses
problems for even a small, full-time group of professionals. One is that the
overseers must depend on those they oversee for much of the information
necessary for regulation. Such a situation is naturally a delicate perplexity.
There is also the problem of fragmented authority. For
example, if an American scientist spies on the country while employed by NASA,
then defects to Russia and continues his spying but does it from France, which
American agency is responsible for his neutralization? The FBI, since he began
his activities under their jurisdiction, or the CIA, since he shifted to
activities under their purview? With the possibility of bureaucratic jealousies
escalating into open rivalry, such questions take on major import.
Shortly after it was formed, the 54/12 Group tried to solve
the problems of internal information and fragmented authority. The 54/12 Group
established a small special security section, a section with no identity save
that of staff for the 54/12 Group. The special section's duties included
liaison work. The head of the special section serves on a board composed of
leading staff members from all intelligence agencies. He has the power to
arbitrate jurisdictional disputes. The special section also has the
responsibility of independently evaluating all the information given to the 54/12
Group by the intelligence community. But most important, the special section is
given the power to perform "such necessary security functions as
extraordinary circumstances might dictate, subject to Group [the 54/12 Group]
regulation."
To help the special section perform its duties, the 54/12
Group assigned a small staff to the section chief and allowed him to draw on
other major security and intelligence groups for needed staff and authority.
The 54/12 Group knows it has created a potential problem.
The special section could follow the natural tendency of most government
organizations and grow in size and awkwardness, thereby becoming a part of the
problem it was created to solve. The special section, small though it is, has
tremendous power as well as tremendous potential. A small mistake by the
section could be a lever of great magnitude.
The 54/12 Group supervises its creation cautiously. They
keep a firm check on any bureaucratic growth potentials in the section, they
carefully review its activities, keeping the operational work of the section at
a bare minimum, and they place only extraordinary men in charge of the section.
* * *
While Malcolm and Wendy waited for the doctor, a large,
competent-looking man sat in an outer office on Pennsylvania Avenue, waiting to
answer a very special summons. His name was Kevin Powell. He waited patiently
but eagerly: he did not receive such a summons every day. Finally a secretary
beckoned, and he entered the inner office of a man who looked like a kindly,
delicate old uncle. The old man motioned Powell to a chair.
"Ah, Kevin, how wonderful to see you."
"Good to see you, sir. You're looking fit."
"As do you, my boy, as do you. Here." The old man
tossed Powell a file folder. "Read this." As Powell read, the old man
examined him closely. The plastic surgeons had done a marvelous job on his ear,
and it took an experienced eye to detect the slight bulge close to his left
armpit. When Powell raised his eyes, the old man said, "What do you think,
my boy?"
Powell chose his words carefully. "Very strange, sir.
I'm not sure what it means, though it must mean a great deal."
"Exactly my thoughts, my boy, exactly mine. Both the
Agency and the Bureau [FBI] have squads of men scouring the city, watching the
airports, buses, trains, the usual routine, only expanded to quite a staggering
level. As you know, it's these routine operations that make or break most endeavors,
and I must say they are doing fairly well. Or they were up until now."
He paused for breath and an encouraging look of interest
from Powell. "They've found a barber who remembers giving our boy a
haircut— rather predictable yet commendable action on his part— sometime after
Weatherby was shot. By the way, he is coming along splendidly. They hope to
question him late this evening. Where was I… Oh, yes. They canvassed the area
and found where he bought some clothes, but then they lost him. They have no idea
where to look next. I have one or two ideas about that myself, but I'll save
them for later. There are some points I want you to check me on. See if you can
answer them for me, or maybe find some questions I can't find.
"Why? Why the whole thing? If it was Czechoslovakia,
why that particular branch, a do-nothing bunch of analysts? If it wasn't, we're
back to our original question.
"Look at the method. Why so blatant? Why was the man
Heidegger hit the night before? What did he know that the others didn't? If he
was special, why kill the others too? If Malcolm works for them, they didn't
need to question Heidegger about much. Malcolm could have told them.
"Then we have our boy Malcolm, Malcolm with the many
'why's. If he is a double, why did he use the Panic procedure? If he is a
double, why did he set up a meeting— to kill Sparrow IV, whom he could have
picked off at his leisure had he worked at establishing the poor fellow's
identity? If he isn't a double, why did he shoot the two men he called to take
him to safety? Why did he go to Heidegger's apartment after the shooting? And,
of course, where, why, and how is he now?
"There are a lot of other questions that grow from
these, but I think these are the main ones. Do you agree?"
Powell nodded and said, "I do. Where do I fit in?"
The old man smiled. "You, my dear boy, have the good
fortune to be on loan to my section. As you know, we were created to sort out
the mishmashes of bureaucracy. I imagine some of those paper pushers who
shuffled my poor old soul here assumed I would be stuck processing paper until
I died or retired. Neither of those alternatives appeal to me, so I have
redefined liaison work to mean a minimum of paper and a maximum of action,
pirated a very good set of operatives, and set up my own little shop, just like
in the old days. With the official maze of the intelligence community, I have a
good deal of confusion to play with. A dramatist I once knew said the best way
to create chaos is to flood the scene with actors. I've managed to capitalize
on the chaos of others.
"I think some of my efforts," he added in a modest
tone, "small though they may be, have been of some value to the country.
"Now we come to this little affair. It isn't really
much of my business, but the damn thing intrigues me. Besides, I think there is
something wrong with the way the Agency and the Bureau are handling the whole
thing. First of all, this is a very extraordinary situation, and they are using
fairly ordinary means. Second, they're tripping over each other, both hot to
make the pinch, as they say.
Then there's the one thing I can't really express. Something
about this whole affair bothers me. It should never have happened. Both the
idea behind the event and the way in which the event manifested itself are so…
wrong, so out of place. I think it's beyond the parameters of the Agency. Not
that they're incompetent— though I think they have missed one or two small
points— but they're just not viewing it from the right place. Do you
understand, my boy?"
Powell nodded. "And you are in the right place,
right?"
The old man smiled. "Well, let's just say one foot is
in the door. Now here's what I want you to do. Did you notice our boy's medical
record? Don't bother looking, I'll tell you. He has many times the number of
colds and respiratory problems he should. He often needs medical attention.
Now, if you remember the transcript of the second panic call, he sneezed and
said he had a cold. I'm playing a long shot that his cold is much worse, and
that wherever he is, he'll come out to get help. What do you think?"
Powell shrugged. "Might be worth a try."
The old man was gleeful. "I think so, too. Neither the
Agency nor the Bureau has tumbled to this yet, so we have a clear field. Now,
I've arranged for you to head a special team of D.C. detectives— never mind how
I managed it, I did. Start with the general practitioners in the metropolitan
area. Find out if any of them have treated anyone like our boy— use his new
description. If they haven't tell them to report to us if they do. Make up some
plausible story so they'll open up to you. One other thing. Don't let the
others find out we're looking too. The last time they had a chance, two men got
shot."
Powell stood to go. "I'll do what I can, sir."
"Fine, fine, my boy. I knew I could count on you. I'm
still thinking on this. If I come up with anything else, I'll let you know.
Good luck."
Powell left the room. When the door was shut, the old man
smiled.
* * *
While Kevin Powell began his painstakingly dull check of the
Washington medical community, a very striking man with strange eyes climbed out
of a taxi in front of Sunny's Surplus. The man had spent the morning reading a
Xeroxed file identical with the one Powell had just examined. He had received
the file from a very distinguished-looking gentleman. The man with the strange
eyes had a plan for finding Malcolm. He spent an hour driving around the
neighborhood, and now he began to walk it. At bars, newspaper stands, public
offices, private buildings, anywhere a man could stop for a few minutes, he
would stop and show an artist's projected sketch of Malcolm with short hair.
When people seemed reluctant to talk to him, the man flashed one of five sets
of credentials the distinguished man had obtained. By 3:30 that afternoon he
was tired, but it didn't show. He was more resolute than ever. He stopped at a
Hot Shoppe for coffee. On the way out he flashed the picture and a badge at the
cashier in a by now automatic manner. Almost anyone else would have registered
the shock he felt when the clerk said she recognized the man.
"Yeah, I saw the son of a bitch. He threw his money at
me he was in such a hurry to leave. Ripped a nylon crawling after a rolling
nickel."
"Was he alone?"
"Yeah, who would want to be with a creep like
that?"
"Did you see which way he went?"
"Sure I saw. If I'd have had a gun I'd have shot him.
He went that way."
The man carefully paid his bill, leaving a dollar tip for
the cashier. He walked in the direction she had pointed. Nothing, no reason to
make a man looking for safety hurry that particular way. Then again… He turned
into the parking lot and became a D.C. detective for the fat man in the felt
hat.
"Sure, I seen him. He got into the car with the
chick." The striking man's eyes narrowed. "What chick?"
"The one that works for them lawyers. The firm rents
space for all the people that work there. She ain't so great to look at, but
she's got class, if you know what I mean."
"I think so," said the fake detective, "I
think so. Who is she?"
"Just a minute." The man in the hat waddled into a
small shack. He returned carrying a ledger. "Let's see, lot 63… lot 63.
Yeah, here it is. Ross, Wendy Ross. This here is her Alexandria address."
The narrow eyes glanced briefly at the offered book and
recorded what they saw. They turned back to the man in the felt hat.
"Thanks." The striking man began to walk away.
"Don't mention it. Say, what's this guy done?"
The man stopped and turned back. "Nothing, really.
We're just looking for him. He… he's been exposed to something— it couldn't
hurt you— and we just want to make sure he's all right."
Ten minutes later the striking man was in a phone booth.
Across the city a distinguished-looking gentleman picked up a private phone
that seldom rang. "Yes," he said, then recognized the voice.
"I have a firm lead."
"I knew you would. Have someone check it out, but don't
let him act on it unless absolutely unavoidable circumstances arise. I want you
to handle it personally so there will be no more mistakes. Right now I have a
more pressing matter for your expert attention."
"Our sick mutual friend?"
"Yes. I'm afraid he has to take a turn for the worse.
Meet me at place four as soon as you can." The line went dead.
The man stayed in the phone booth long enough to make
another short call. Then he hailed a taxi and rode away into the fading light.
A small car parked across and up the street from Wendy's
apartment just as she brought a tray of stew to Malcolm. The driver could see
Wendy's door very clearly, even though he had to bend his tall, thin body into
a very strange position. He watched the apartment, waiting.
Overconfidence breeds error when we
take for granted that the game will continue on its normal course; when we fail
to provide for an unusually powerful resource— a check, a sacrifice, a stalemate. Afterwards the victim may wail, 'But who could have dreamt of such an
idiotic-looking move?
—Fred Reinfeld, The Complete Chess
Course
Chapter 5
Saturday
"Are you feeling any better?"
Malcolm looked up at Wendy and had to admit that he was. The
pain in his throat had subsided to a dull ache and almost twenty-four hours of
sleep had restored a good deal of his strength. His nose still ran most of the
time and talking brought pain, but even these discomforts were slowly fading.
As the discomforts of his body decreased, the discomforts of
his mind increased. He knew it was Saturday, two days after his co-workers had
been killed and he had shot a man. By now several very resourceful, very
determined groups of people would be turning Washington upside down. At least
one group wanted him dead. The others probably had little affection for him. In
a dresser across the room lay $9,382 stolen from a dead man, or at least
removed from his apartment. Here he was, lying sick in bed without the foggiest
notion about what had happened or what he was to do. On top of all that, here
on his bed sat a funny-looking girl wearing a T shirt and a smile.
"You know, I really don't understand it," he
rasped. He didn't. In all the hours he had devoted to the problem he could find
only four tentative assumptions that held water: that the Agency had been
penetrated by somebody; that somebody had hit his section; that somebody had
tried to frame Heidegger as a double by leaving the "hidden" money;
and that somebody wanted him dead.
"Do you know what you're going to do yet?" Wendy
used her forefinger to trace the outline of Malcolm's thigh under the sheet.
"No." He said exasperatedly, "I might try the
panic number later tonight, if you'll take me to a phone booth."
She leaned forward and lightly kissed his forehead.
"I'll take you anywhere." She smiled and lightly kissed him, his
eyes, his cheek, down to his mouth, down to his neck. Flipping back the sheet,
she kissed his chest, down to his stomach, down.
Afterwards they showered and he put in his contacts. He went
back to bed. When Wendy came back into his room, she was fully dressed.
She tossed him four paperbacks. "I didn't know what you
liked, but these should keep you busy while I'm gone."
"Where are—" Malcolm had to pause and swallow. It
still hurt. "Where are you going?"
She smiled. "Silly boy, I've got to shop. We're low on
food and there are still some things you need. If you're very good— and you're
not bad— I might bring you a surprise." She walked away but turned back at
the door. "If the phone rings, don't answer unless it rings twice, stops,
then rings again. That'll be me. Aren't I learning how to be a good spy? I'm
not expecting anybody. If you're quiet, no one will know you're here." Her
voice took on a more serious tone. "Now, don't worry, OK? You're perfectly
safe here." She turned and left.
Malcolm had just picked up one book when her head popped
around the doorjamb. "Hey," she said, "I just thought of
something. If I get strep throat, will it classify as venereal disease?"
Malcolm missed when he threw the book at her.
When Wendy opened her door and walked to her car, she didn't
notice the man in the van parked across the street stirring out of lethargy. He
was a plain-looking man. He wore a bulky raincoat even though spring sunshine
ruled the morning. It was almost as if he knew the good weather couldn't last.
The man watched Wendy pull out of the parking lot and drive away. He looked at
his watch. He would wait three minutes.
Saturday is a day off for most government employees, but not
for all. This particular Saturday saw a large number of civil servants from
various government levels busily and glumly drawing overtime.
One of these was Kevin Powell. He and his men had talked to
216 doctors, receiving nurses, interns, and other assorted members of the
medical profession. Over half the general practitioners and throat specialists
in the Washington area had been questioned. It was now eleven o'clock on a fine
Saturday morning. All Powell had to report to the old man behind the mahogany
desk could be summed up in one word: nothing.
The old man's spirits weren't dimmed by the news.
"Well, my boy, just keep on trying, that's all I can say, just keep on
trying. If it's any consolation, let me say we're in the same position as the
others, only they have run out of things to do except watch. But one thing has
happened: Weatherby is dead."
Powell was puzzled. "I thought you said his condition
was improving."
The old man spread his hands. "It was. They planned to
question him late last night or early this morning. When the interrogation team
arrived shortly after one a.m., they found him dead."
"How?" Powell's voice held more than a little
suspicion.
"How indeed? The guard on the door swears only medical
personnel went in and out. Since he was in the Langley hospital, I'm sure
security must have been tight. His doctors say that, given the shock and the
loss of blood, it is entirely possible he died from the wound. They were sure
he was doing marvelously. Right now they're doing a complete autopsy."
"It's very strange."
"Yes, it is, isn't it? But because it's strange, it
should have been almost predictable. The whole case is strange. Ah, well, we've
been over this ground before. I have something new for you."
Powell leaned closer to the desk. He was tired. The old man
continued, "I told you I wasn't satisfied with the way the Agency and the
Bureau were handling the case. They've run into a blind wall. I'm sure part of
the reason is that their method led them there. They've been looking for
Malcolm the way a hunter looks for any game. While they're skilled hunters,
they're missing a thing or two. I want you to start looking for him as though
you were the prey. You've read all the information we have on him, you've been
to his apartment. You must have some sense of the man. Put yourself in his
shoes and see where you end up.
"I have a few helpful tidbits for you. We know he
needed transportation to get wherever he is. If nothing else, a man on foot is
visible, and our boy wants to avoid that. The Bureau is fairly certain he
didn't take a cab. I see no reason to fault their investigation along those
lines. I don't think he would ride a bus, not with the package the man at the
store sold him. Besides, one never knows who one might meet on a bus.
"So there's your problem. Take a man or two, men who
can put themselves in the right frame of mind. Start from where he was last
seen. Then, my boy, get yourself hidden the way he has."
Just before Powell opened the door, he looked at the smiling
old man and said, "There's one other thing that's strange about this whole
business, sir. Malcolm was never trained as a field agent. He's a researcher,
yet look how well he's made out."
"Yes, that is rather strange," answered the old
man. He smiled and said, "You know, I'm getting rather keen to meet our
boy Malcolm. Find him for me, Kevin, find him for me quickly."
Malcolm needed a cup of coffee. The hot liquid would make
his throat feel better and the caffeine would pep him up. He grinned slowly,
being careful not to stretch tender neck muscles. With Wendy, a man needed a
lot of pep. He went downstairs to the kitchen. He had just put a pot on to boil
when the doorbell rang.
Malcolm froze. The gun was upstairs, right next to his bed
where he could reach it in a hurry, provided, of course, that he was in bed.
Quietly, Malcolm tiptoed to the door. The bell rang again. He sighed with
relief when he saw through the one-way glass peephole that it was only a
bored-looking mailman, his bag slung over one shoulder, a package in one hand.
Then he became annoyed. If he didn't answer the door, the mailman might keep
coming back until he delivered his package. Malcolm looked down at his body. He
only had on jockey shorts and a T shirt. Oh well, he thought, the mailman's
probably seen it all before. He opened the door.
"Good morning, sir, how are you today?"
The mailman's cheer seemed to infect Malcolm. He smiled
back, and said hoarsely, "Got a little cold. What can I do for you?"
"Got a package here for a Miss…" The mailman
paused and slyly smiled at Malcolm. "A Miss Wendy Ross. Special delivery,
return receipt requested."
"She's not here right now. Could you come back
later?"
The mailman scractched his head. "Well, could, but it
would sure be easier if you signed for it. Hell, government don't care who
signs, long as it's signed."
"OK," said Malcolm. "Do you have a pen?"
The mailman slapped his pockets unsuccessfully.
"Come on in," Malcolm said. "I'll get
one."
The mailman smiled as he entered the room. He closed the
door behind him. "You're making my day a lot easier by going to all this
trouble," he said.
Malcolm shrugged. "Think nothing of it." He turned
and went into the kitchen to find a pen. As he walked through the door, his
mind abstractedly noted that the mailman had put the package down and was
unslinging his pouch.
The mailman was very happy. His orders had been to determine
whether Malcolm was in the apartment, to reconnoiter the building, and to make
a hit only if it could be done with absolute safety and certainty. He knew a
bonus would follow his successful display of initiative in hitting Malcolm. The
girl would come later. He pulled the silenced sten gun out of his pouch.
Just before Malcolm came around the corner from the kitchen
he heard the click when the mailman armed the sten gun. Malcolm hadn't found a
pen. In one hand he carried the coffeepot and in the other an empty cup. He
thought the nice mailman might like some refreshment. That Malcolm didn't die
then may be credited to the fact that when he turned the corner and saw the gun
swinging toward him he didn't stop to think. He threw the pot of boiling coffee
and the empty cup straight at the mailman.
The mailman hadn't heard Malcolm coming. His first thought
centered on the objects flying toward his face. He threw up his arms, covering
his head with the gun. The coffeepot bounced off the gun, but the lid flew off
and hot coffee splashed down on bare arms and an upturned face.
Screaming, the mailman threw the gun away from him. It
skidded across the floor, stopping under the table holding Wendy's stereo.
Malcolm made a desperate dive for it, only to be tripped by a black loafer. He
fell to his hands and staggered up. He quickly looked over his shoulder and
ducked. The mailman flew over Malcolm's head. Had the flying side kick
connected, the back of Malcolm's head would have shattered and in all
probability his neck would have snapped.
Even though he hadn't practiced in a dojo for six months,
the mailman executed the difficult landing perfectly. However, he landed on the
scatter rug Wendy's grandmother had given her as a birthday present. The rug
slid along the waxed floor and the mailman fell to his hands. He bounced up
twice as fast as Malcolm.
The two men stared at each other. Malcolm had at least ten
feet to travel before he could reach the gun on his right. He could probably
beat the mailman to the table, but before he could pull the gun out the man
would be all over his back. Malcolm was closest to the door, but it was closed.
He knew he wouldn't have the precious seconds it would take to open it.
The mailman looked at Malcolm and smiled. With the toe of
his shoe he tested the hardwood floor. Slick. With deft, practiced movements he
slipped his feet out of the loafers. He wore slipperlike socks. These too came
off when he rubbed his feet on the floor. The mailman came prepared to walk quietly,
barefoot, and his preparations served him in an unexpected manner. His bare
feet hugged the floor.
Malcolm looked at his smiling opponent and began to accept
death. He had no way of knowing the man's brown belt proficiency, but he knew
he didn't stand a chance. Malcolm's knowledge of martial arts was almost
negligible. He had read fight scenes in numerous books and seen them in the
movies. He had had two fights as a child, won one, lost one. His physical
education instructor in college had spent three hours teaching the class some
cute tricks he had learned in the Marines. Reason made Malcolm try to copy the
man's stance, legs bent, fists clenched, left arm in front and bent
perpendicular to the floor, right arm held close to the waist.
Very slowly the mailman began to shuffle across the fifteen
feet that separated him from his prey. Malcolm began to circle toward his
right, vaguely wondering why he bothered. When the mailman was six feet from
Malcolm he made his move. He yelled and with his left arm feinted a backhand
snap at Malcolm's face. As the mailman anticipated, Malcolm ducked quickly to
his right side. When the mailman brought his left hand back, he dropped his
left shoulder and whirled to his right on the ball of his left foot. At the end
of the three-quarters circle his right leg shot to meet Malcolm's ducking head.
But six months is too long to be out of practice and expect
perfect results, even when fighting an untrained amateur. The kick missed
Malcolm's face, but thudded into his left shoulder. The blow knocked Malcolm
into the wall. When he bounced off he barely dodged the swinging hand chop
follow-through blow.
The mailman was very angry with himself. He had missed
twice. True, his opponent was injured, but he should have been dead. The mailman
knew he must get back into practice before he met an opponent who knew what to
do.
A good karate instructor will emphasize that karate is
three-quarters mental. The mailman knew this, so he devoted his entire mind to
the death of his opponent. He concentrated so deeply he failed to hear Wendy as
she opened and shut the door, quietly so as not to disturb Malcolm's sleeping.
She had forgotten her checkbook.
Wendy was dreaming. It wasn't real, these two men standing
in her living room. One her Malcolm, his left arm twitching to life at his
side. The other a short, stocky stranger standing so strangely, his back toward
her. Then she heard the stranger very softly say, "You've caused enough
trouble!" and she knew it was all frighteningly real. As the stranger
began to shuffle toward Malcolm, she carefully reached around the kitchen
corner, and took a long carving knife from a sparkling set held on the wall by
a magnet. She walked toward the stranger.
The mailman heard the click of heels on the hardwood floor. He
quickly feinted toward Malcolm and whirled to face the new challenge. When he
saw the frightened girl standing with a knife clutched awkwardly in her right
hand, the worry that had been building in his brain ceased. He quickly shuffled
toward her, dodging and dipping as she backed away trembling. He let her back
up until she was about to run into the couch, then he made his move. His left
foot snapped forward in a roundhouse kick and the knife flew from her numbed
hand. His left knuckles split the skin just beneath her left cheekbone in a
vicious backhand strike. Wendy sank, stunned, to the couch.
But the mailman had forgotten an important maxim of
multiple-attackers situations. A man being attacked by two or more opponents
must keep moving, delivering quick, alternate attacks to each of his opponents.
If he stops to concentrate on one before all of his opponents have been
neutralized, he leaves himself exposed. The mailman should have whirled to
attack Malcolm immediately after the kick. Instead he went for the coup de grâce on Wendy.
By the time the mailman had delivered his backhand blow to
Wendy, Malcolm had the sten gun in his hand. He could use his left arm only to
prop the barrel up, but he lined the gun up just as the mailman raised his left
hand for the final downward chop.
"Don't!"
The mailman whirled toward his other opponent just as
Malcolm pulled the trigger. The coughing sounds hadn't stopped before the
mailman's chest blossomed with a red, spurting row. The body flew over the
couch and thudded on the floor.
Malcolm picked Wendy up. Her left eye began to puff shut and
a trickle of blood ran down her cheek. She sobbed quietly, "My God, my
God, my God."
It took Malcolm five minutes to calm her down. He peered
cautiously through the blinds. No one was in sight. The yellow van across the
street looked empty. He left Wendy downstairs with the machine gun huddled in
her arms pointed at the door. He told her to shoot anything that came through.
He quickly dressed, and packed his money, his clothes, and the items Wendy had
bought him in one of her spare suitcases. When he came downstairs, she was more
rational. He sent her upstairs to pack. While she was gone, he searched the
corpse and found nothing. When she came down ten minutes later, her face had been
washed and she carried a suitcase.
Malcolm took a deep breath and opened the door. He had a
coat draped over his revolver. He couldn't bring himself to take the sten gun.
He knew what it had done. No one shot him. He walked to the car. Still no
bullets. No one was even visible. He nodded to Wendy. She ran to the car
dragging their bags. They got in and he quietly drove away.
Powell was tired. He and two other Washington detectives
were covering covered ground, walking along all the streets in the area where
Malcolm had last been sighted. They questioned people at every building. All
they found were people who had been questioned before. Powell was leaning
against a light pole trying to find a new idea, when he saw one of his men
hurrying toward him.
The man was Detective Andrew Walsh, Homicide. He grabbed
Powell's arm to steady himself. "I think I've found something, sir."
Walsh, paused to catch his breath. "You know how we've found a lot of
people who were questioned before? Well, I found one, a parking-lot attendant,
who told the cop who questioned him something that isn't in the official
reports."
"For Christ's sake, what?"
Powell was no longer tired.
"He made Malcolm, off a picture this cop showed him.
More than that, he told him he saw Malcolm get into a car with this girl.
Here's the girl's name and address."
"When did all this happen?" Powell began to feel
cold and uneasy.
"Yesterday afternoon."
"Come on!" Powell ran down the street to the car,
a panting policeman in his wake.
They had driven three blocks when the phone on the dash
buzzed. Powell answered. "Yes?"
"Sir, the medical survey team reports a Dr. Robert
Knudsen identified Condor's picture as the man he treated for strep throat
yesterday. He treated the suspect at the apartment of a Wendy Ross, R-o…"
Powell cut the dispatcher short. "We're on our way to
her apartment now. I want all units to converge on the area, but do not
approach the house until I get there. Tell them to get there as quickly but as
quietly as they can. Now give me the chief."
A full minute passed before Powell heard the light voice
come over the phone. "Yes, Kevin, what do you have?"
"We're on our way to Malcolm's hideout. Both groups hit
on it at about the same time. I'll give you details later. There's one other
thing: somebody with official credentials has been looking for Malcolm and not
reporting what he finds."
There was a long pause, then the old man said, "This
could explain many things, my boy. Many things. Be very careful. I hope you're
in time." The line went dead. Powell hung up, and resigned himself to the
conclusion that he was probably much too late.
Ten minutes later Powell and three detectives rang Wendy's
doorbell. They waited a minute, then the biggest man kicked the door in. Five
minutes later Powell summed up what he found to the old man.
"The stranger is unidentifiable from here. His
postman's uniform is a fake. The silenced sten gun was probably used during the
hit on the Society. The way I see it, he and someone else, probably our boy
Malcolm, were fighting. Malcolm beat him to the gun. I'm sure it's the
mailman's because his pouch is rigged to carry it. Our boy's luck seems to be
holding very well. We've found a picture of the girl, and we've got her car
license number. How do you want to handle it?"
"Have the police put out an APB on her for… murder.
That'll throw our friend who's monitoring us and using our credentials. Right
now, I want to know who the dead man is, and I want to know fast. Send his
photo and prints to every agency with a priority rush order. Do not include any
other information. Start your teams looking for Malcolm and the girl. Then I
guess we have to wait."
A dark sedan drove by the apartment as Powell and the others
walked toward their cars. The driver was tall and painfully thin. His
passenger, a man with striking eyes hidden behind sunglasses, waved him on. No
one noticed them drive past.
Malcolm drove around Alexandria until he found a small,
dumpy used-car lot. He parked two blocks away and sent Wendy to make the
purchase. Ten minutes later, after having sworn she was Mrs. A. Edgerton for
the purpose of registration and paid an extra hundred dollars cash, she drove
off in a slightly used Dodge. Malcolm followed her to a park. They transferred
the luggage and removed the license plates from the Corvair. Then they loaded
the Dodge and slowly drove away.
Malcolm drove for five hours. Wendy never spoke during the
whole trip. When they stopped at the Parisburg, Virginia, motel, Malcolm
registered as Mr. and Mrs. Evans. He parked the car behind the motel "so
it won't get dirty from the traffic passing by." The old lady running the
motel merely shrugged and went back to her TV. She had seen it before.
Wendy lay very still on the bed. Malcolm slowly undressed.
He took his medicine and removed his contacts before he sat down next to her.
"Why don't you undress and get some sleep, honey?"
She turned and looked at him slowly. "It's real, isn't
it." Her voice was softly matter-of-fact. "The whole thing is real.
And you killed that man. In my apartment, you killed a man."
"It was either him or us. You know that. You tried,
too."
She turned away. "I know." She got up and slowly
undressed. She turned off the light and climbed into bed. Unlike before, she
didn't snuggle close. When Malcolm went to sleep an hour later, he was sure she
was still awake.
Where there is much light there is
also much shadow.
—Goethe
Chapter 6
Sunday
"Ah, Kevin, we seem to be making progress."
The old man's crisp, bright words did little to ease the
numbness gripping Powell's mind. His body ached, but the discomfort was
minimal. He had been conditioned for much more severe strains than one missed
rest period. But during three months of rest and recuperation, Powell had
become accustomed to sleeping late on Sunday mornings. Additionally, the
frustration of his present assignment irritated him. So far his involvement had
been post facto.
His two years of training and ten years' experience were
being used to run errands and gather information. Any cop could do that, and
many cops were. Powell didn't share the old man's optimism.
"How, sir?" Frustrated as he was, Powell spoke
respectfully. "Some trace of Condor and the girl?"
"No, not yet." Despite a very long night, the old
man sparkled. "There's still a chance she bought that car, but it hasn't
been seen. No, our progress is from another angle. We've identified the dead
man."
Powell's mind cleared. The old man continued.
"Our friend was once Calvin Lloyd, sergeant, United
States Marine Corps. In 1959 he left that group rather suddenly while stationed
in Korea as an adviser to a South Korean Marine unit. There is a good chance he
was mixed up in the murder of a Seoul madam and one of her girls. The Navy
could never find any direct evidence, but they think the madam and he were
running a base commuter service and had a falling out over rebates. Shortly
after the bodies were found, Lloyd went AWOL. The Marines didn't look for him
very hard. In 1961 Navy Intelligence received a report indicating he had died
rather suddenly in Tokyo. Then in 1963 he was indentified as one of several
arms dealers in Laos. Evidently his job was technical advice. At the time, he
was linked to a man called Vincent Dale Maronick. More on Maronick later. Lloyd
dropped out of sight in 1965, and until yesterday he was again believed
dead."
The old man paused. Powell cleared his throat, signaling
that he wanted to speak. After receiving a courteous nod, Powell said,
"Well, at least we know that much. Besides telling us a small who, how
does it help?"
The old man held up his left forefinger. "Be patient,
my boy, be patient. Let's take our steps slowly and see what paths cross where.
"The autopsy on Weatherby yielded only a probability,
but based on what has happened, I'm inclined to rate it very high. There is a
chance his death may be due to an air bubble in the blood, but the pathologists
won't swear to it. His doctors insist the cause must be external— and therefore
not their fault. I'm inclined to agree with them. It's a pity for us Weatherby
isn't around for questioning, but for someone it's a very lucky break. Far too
lucky, if you ask me.
"I'm convinced Weatherby was a double agent, though for
whom I have no idea. The files that keep turning up missing, our friend with
credentials covering the town just ahead of us, the setup of the hit on the
Society. They all smell of inside information. With Weatherby eliminated, it
follows he could have been the leak that became too dangerous for someone. Then
there's that whole shooting scene behind the theaters. We've been over that
before, but something new occurred to me.
"I had both Sparrow IV's and Weatherby's bodies
examined by our Ballistics man. Whoever shot Weatherby almost amputated his leg
with the bullet. According to our man it was at least a .357 magnum with soft
lead slugs. But Sparrow IV had only a neat round hole in his throat. Our
Ballistics man doesn't think they were shot with the same gun. That, plus the
fact Weatherby wasn't killed, makes the whole thing look fishy. I think our boy
Malcolm, for some reason or other, shot Weatherby and then ran. Weatherby was
hurt, but not hurt so bad he couldn't eliminate witness Sparrow IV. But that's
not the interesting piece of news.
"From 1958 until late 1969, Weatherby was stationed in
Asia, primarily out of Hong Kong, but with stints in Korea, Japan, Taiwan,
Laos, Thailand, Cambodia, and Vietnam. He worked his way up the structure from
special field agent to station head. You'll note he was there during the same
period as our dead mailman. Now for a slight but very interesting digression.
What do you know about the man called Maronick?"
Powell furrowed his brow. "I think he was some sort of
special agent. A freelancer, as I recall."
The old man smiled, pleased. "Very good, though I'm not
sure if I understand what you mean by 'special.' If you mean extremely
competent, thorough, careful, and highly successful, then you're correct. If
you mean dedicated and loyal to one side, then you are very wrong. Vincent
Maronick was— or is, if I'm not mistaken— the best freelance agent in years,
maybe the best of this century for his specialty. For a short-term operation
requiring cunning, ruthlessness, and a good deal of caution, he was the best
money could buy. The man was tremendously skiled. We're not sure where he
received his training, though it's clear he was American. His individual
abilities were not so outstanding that they couldn't be matched. There were and
are better planners, better shots, better pilots, better saboteurs, better
everything in particular. But the man had a persevering drive, a toughness that
pushed his capabilities far beyond those of his competitors. He's a very
dangerous man, one of the men I could fear.
"In the early sixties he surfaced working for the
French, mainly in Algeria, but, please note, also taking care of some of their
remaining interests in Southeast Asia. Starting in 1963, he came to the
attention of those in our business. At various times he worked for Britain,
Communist China, Italy, South Africa, the Congo, Canada, and he even did two
stints for the Agency. He also did a type of consulting service for the IRA and
the OAS (against his former French employers). He always gave satisfaction, and
there are no reports of any failures. He was very expensive. Rumor has it he
was looking for a big score. Exactly why he was in the business isn't clear,
but my guess is it was the one field that allowed him to use his talents to the
fullest and reap rewards quasi-legally. Now here's the interesting part.
"In 1964 Maronick was employed by the Generalissimo on
Taiwan. Ostensibly he was used for actions against mainland China, but at the
time the General was having trouble with the native Taiwanese and some
dissidents among his own immigrant group. Maronick was employed to help
preserve order. Washington wasn't pleased with some of the Nationalist
government's internal policies. They were afraid the General's methods might be
a little too heavy-handed for our good. The General refused to agree, and began
to go his own merry way. At the same time, we began to worry about Maronick. He
was just too good and too available. He had never been employed against us, but
it was just a matter of time. The Agency decided to terminate Maronick, as both
a preventive measure and as a subtle hint to the General. Now, who do you
suppose was station agent out of Taiwan when the Maronick termination order
came through?"
Powell was 90 percent sure, so he ventured, "Weatherby?"
"Right you are. Weatherby was in charge of the
termination operation. He reported it successful, but with a hitch. The method
was a bomb in Maronick's billet. Both the Chinese agent who planted the bomb
and Maronick were killed. Naturally, the explosion obliterated both bodies.
Weatherby verified the hit as an eyewitness.
"Now let's back up a little. Whom do you suppose
Maronick employed as an aide on at least five different missions?"
It wasn't a guess. Powell said, "Our dead mailman,
Sergeant Calvin Lloyd."
"Right again. Now here's yet another clincher. We never
had much on Maronick, but we did have a few foggy pictures, sketchy
descriptions, whatnot. Guess whose file is missing?" The old man didn't
even give Powell a chance to speak before he answered his own question.
"Maronick's. Also, we have no records of Sergeant Lloyd. Neat, yes?"
"Yes indeed." Powell was still puzzled. "What
makes you think Maronick is involved?"
The old man smiled. "Just playing an inductive hunch. I
racked my brain for a man who could and would pull a hit like the one on the
Society. When, out of a dozen men, Maronick's file turned up missing, my
curiosity rose. Navy Intelligence sent over the identification of Lloyd, and
his file noted he had worked with Maronick. Wheels began to turn. When they
both linked up with Weatherby, lights flashed and a band played. I spent a very
productive morning making my poor old brain work when I should have been feeding
pigeons and smelling cherry blossoms."
The room was silent while the old man rested and Powell
thought. Powell said, "So you figure Maronick is running some kind of
action against us and Weatherby was doubling for him, probably for some
time."
"No," said the old man softly, "I don't think
so."
The old man's reply surprised Powell. He could only stare
and wait for the soft voice to continue.
"The first and most obvious question is why. Given all
that has happened and the way in which it has happened, I don't think the
question can practically and logically be approached. If it can't be approached
logically, then we are starting from an erroneous assumption, the assumption
that the CIA is the central object of an action. Then there's the next question
of who. Who would pay— and I imagine pay dearly— for Maronick with Weatherby's
duplicity and at least Lloyd's help to have us hit in the way we have been hit?
Even given that phony Czech revenge note, I can think of no one. That, of
course, brings us back to the why question, and we're spinning our wheels in a
circle going nowhere. No, I think the proper and necessary question to ask and
answer is not who or why, but what. What is going on? If we can answer that,
then the other questions and their answers will flow. Right now, there is only
one key to that what, our boy Malcolm."
Powell sighed wearily. "So we're back to where we
started from, looking for our lost Condor."
"Not exactly where we started from. I have some of my
men digging rather extensively in Asia, looking for whatever it is that ties
Weatherby, Maronick, and Lloyd together. They may find nothing, but no one can
tell. We also have a better idea of the opposition, and I have some men looking
for Maronick."
"With all the machinery you have at your disposal we
should be able to flush one of the two, Malcolm or Maronick— sounds like a
vaudeville team, doesn't it?"
"We're not using the machinery, Kevin. We're using us,
plus what we can scrounge from the D.C. police."
Powell choked. "What the hell! You control maybe fifty
men, and the cops can't give you much. The Agency has hundreds of people
working on this thing now, not counting the Bureau and the NSA and the others.
If you give them what you have given me, they could…"
Quietly but firmly the old man interrupted. "Kevin,
think a moment. Weatherby was the double in the Agency, possibly with some
lower-echelon footmen. He, we assume, acquired the false credentials, passed
along the needed information, and even went into the field himself. But if he was
the double, then who arranged for his execution, who knew the closely guarded
secret of where he was and enough about the security setup to get the
executioner (probably the competent Maronick) in and out again?" He paused
for the flicker of understanding on Powell's face. "That's right another
double. If my hunch is correct, a very highly placed double. We can;t risk any
more leaks. Since we can't trust anyone, we'll have to do it ourselves."
Powell frowned and hesitated before he spoke. "May I
make a suggestion, sir?"
The old man deliberately registered surprise. "Why, of
course you may, my dear boy! You are supposed to use your fine mind, even if
you are afraid of offending your superior."
Powell smiled slightly. "We know, or at least we are
assuming, there is a leak, a fairly highly placed leak. Why don't we keep after
Malcolm but concentrate on stopping the leak from the top? We can figure out
what group of people the leak could be in and work on them. Our surveillance
should catch them even if so far they haven't left a trail. The pressure of
this thing will force them to do something. At the very least, they must keep
in touch with Maronick."
"Kevin," the old man replied quietly, "your
logic is sound, but the conditions for your assumptions invalidate your plan.
You assume we can identify the group of people who could be the source of the
leak. One of the troubles with our intelligence community— indeed, one of the
reasons for my own section— is that things are so big and so complicated such a
group easily numbers over fifty, probably numbers over a hundred, and may run
as high as two hundred persons. That's if the leak is conscious on their part.
Our leak may be sloppy around his secretary, or his communications man may be a
double.
"Even if the leak is not of a secondary nature, through
a secretary or a technician, such surveillance would be massive, though not
impossible. You've already pointed out my logistical limitations. In order to
carry out your suggestion, we would need the permission and assistance of some
of the people in the suspect group. That would never do.
"We also have a problem inherent in the group of people
with whom we would be dealing. They are professionals in the intelligence
business. Don't you think they might tumble to our surveillance? And even if they didn't, each one of their
departments has its own security system we would have to avoid. For example,
officers in Air Force Intelligence are subject to unscheduled spot checks,
including surveillance and phone taps. It's done both to see if the officers
are honest and to see if someone else is watching them. We would have to avoid
security teams and a wary,
experienced suspect.
"What we have," the old man said, placing the tips
of his fingers together, "is a classic intelligence problem. We have
possibly the world's largest security and intelligence organization, an entity
ironically dedicated to both stopping the flow of information from and
increasing the flow to this country. At a moment's notice we can assign a
hundred trained men to dissect a fact as minuscule as a misplaced luggage
sticker. We can turn the same horde loose on any given small group and within a
few days we would know everything the group did. We can bring tremendous
pressure to bear on any point we can find. There lies the problem: on this case
we can't find the point. We know there's a leak in our machine, but until we
can isolate the area it's in, we can't dissect the machine to try to pinpoint the
leak. Such activity would be almost certainly futile, and possibly dangerous,
to say nothing of awkward. Besides, the moment we start looking, the opposition
will know we know there's a leak.
"The key to this whole problem is Malcolm. He might be
able to pinpoint the leak for us, or at least steer us in a particular
direction. If he does, or if we turn up any links between Maronick's operation
and someone in the intelligence community, we will, of course, latch on to the
suspect. But until we have a firm link, such an operation would be sloppy,
hit-and-miss work. I don't like that kind of job. It's inefficient and usually
not productive."
Powell covered his embarrassment with a formal tone.
"Sorry, sir. I guess I wasn't thinking."
The old man shook his head. "On the contrary, my
boy," he exclaimed, "you were thinking, and that's very good. It's
the one thing we've never been able to train our people to do, and it's one
thing these massive organizations tend to discourage. It's far better to have
you thinking and proposing schemes which, shall we say, are hastily considered
and poorly conceived, here in the office, than it is for you to be a robot in
the street reacting blindly. That gets everyone into trouble, and it's a good
way to wind up dead. Keep thinking, Kevin, but be a little more thorough."
"So the plan is still to find Malcolm and bring him
home safe, right?"
The old man smiled. "Not exactly. I've done a lot of
thinking about our boy Malcolm. He is our key. They, whoever they are, want our
boy dead, and want him dead badly. If we can keep him alive, and if we can make him troublesome
enough to them so that they center their activities on his demise, then we have
turned Condor into a key. Maronick and company, by concentrating on Malcolm,
make themselves into their own lock. If we are careful and just a shade lucky,
we can use the key to open the lock. Oh, we still have to find our Condor, and
quickly, before anyone else does. I'm making some additional arrangements to
aid us along that line too. But when we find him, we prime him.
"After you've had some rest, my assistant will bring
you instructions and any further information we receive."
As Powell got up to go, he said, "Can you give me
anything on Maronick?"
The old man said, "I'm having a friend in the French
secret service send over a copy of their file on the flight from Paris. It
won't arrive until tomorrow. I could have had it quicker, but I didn't want to
alert the opposition. Outside of what you already know, I can only tell you
that physically Maronick is reportedly a very striking man."
* * *
Malcolm began to wake just as Powell left the old man's
office. For a few seconds he lay still, remembering all that had happened. Then
a soft voice whispered in his ear, "Are you awake?"
Malcolm rolled over. Wendy rested on one elbow, shyly
looking at him. His throat felt better and he sounded almost normal when he
said, "Good morning."
Wendy blushed. "I'm… I'm sorry about yesterday, I mean
how mean I was. I just… I just have never seen or done anything like that and
the shock…"
Malcolm shut her up with a kiss. "It's OK. It was
pretty horrible."
"What are we going to do now?" she asked.
"I don't know for sure. I think we should hole up here
for at least a day or two." He looked around the sparsely furnished room.
"It may be a little dull."
Wendy looked up at him and grinned. "Well, not too
dull." She kissed him lightly, then again. She pulled his mouth down to
her small breast.
Half an hour later they still hadn't decided anything.
"We can't do that all
the time," Malcolm said at last.
Wendy made a sour face and said, "Why not?" But
she sighed acceptance. "I know what we can do!" She leaned half out
of the bed and groped on the floor. Malcolm grabbed her arm to keep her from
falling.
"What the hell are you doing?" he said.
"I'm looking for my purse. I brought some books we can
read out loud. You said you liked Yeats." She rummaged under the bed.
"Malcolm, I can't find them, they aren't here. Everything else is in my
purse, but the books are missing. I must have… Owww!" Wendy jerked back on
the bed and pried herself loose from Malcolm's suddenly tightened grip.
"Malcolm, what are you doing? That hurt…"
"The books. The missing books." Malcolm turned and
looked at her. "There is something about those missing books that's
important! That has to be the reason!"
Wendy was puzzled. "But they're only poetry books. You
can get them almost anywhere. I probably just forgot to bring them."
"Not those books, the Society's books, the ones
Heidegger found missing!" He told her the story.
Malcolm felt the excitement growing. "If I can tell
them about the missing books, it'll give them something to start on. The reason
my section was hit must have been the books. They found out Heidegger was
digging up old records. They had to hit everybody in case someone else knew. If
I can give the Agency those pieces, maybe they can put the puzzle together. At
least I'll have something more to give them than my story about how people get
shot wherever I go. They frown on that."
"But how will you tell the Agency? Remember what
happened the last time you called them?"
Malcolm frowned. "Yes, I see what you mean. But the
last time they set up a meeting. Even if the opposition has penetrated the
Agency, even if they know what goes over the Panic Line, I still think we're
OK. With all that has gone on, I imagine dozens of people must be involved. At
least some of them will be clean. They'll pass on what I phone in. It should
ring some right bells somewhere." He paused for a moment. "Come on,
we have to go back to Washington."
"Hey, wait a minute!" Wendy's outstretched hand
missed its grasp on Malcolm's arm as he bounded out of bed and into the
bathroom. "Why are we going back there?"
The shower turned on. "Have to. A long-distance phone
call can be traced in seconds, a local one takes longer." The tempo of
falling water on metal walls increased.
"But we might get killed!"
"What?"
Wendy yelled, but she tried to be as quiet as possible.
"I said we might get killed."
"Might get killed here too. You scrub my back and I'll
scrub yours."
* * *
"I'm very disappointed, Maronick." The sharp words
cut through the strained air between the two men. The distinguished-looking
speaker knew he had made a mistake when he saw the look in his companion's
eyes.
"My name is Levine. You will remember that. I suggest
you do not make a slip like that again." The striking man's crisp words
undercut the other man's confidence, but the distinguished-looking gentleman
tried to hide his discomposure.
"My slip is minor compared to the others that have been
happening," he said.
The man who wished to be called Levine showed no emotion to
the average eye. An acute observer who had known him for some time might have detected the slight flush of
frustrated anger and embrassment.
"The operation is not yet over. There have been
setbacks, but there has been no failure. Had there been failure, neither of us
would be here." As if to emphasize his point, he gestured toward the
crowds milling around them. Sunday is a busy day for tourists at the Capitol
building.
The distinguished-looking man regained his confidence. In a
firm whisper he said, "Nevertheless there have been setbacks. As you so
astutely pointed out, the operation is not yet over. I need not remind you that
it was scheduled for completion three days ago. Three days. A good deal can
happen in three days. For all our bumbling we have been very lucky. The longer
the operation continues, the greater the risk that certain things will come to
the fore. We both know how disastrous that could be."
"Everything possible is being done. We must wait for
another chance."
"And if we don't get another chance? What then, my fine
friend, what then?"
The man called Levine turned and looked at him. Once again
the other man felt nervous. Levine said, "Then we make our chance."
"Well, I certainly hope there will be no more…
setbacks."
"I anticipate none."
"Good. I shall keep you informed of all the developments
in the Agency. I expect you to do the same with me. I think there is nothing
further to say."
"There is one other thing," Levine said calmly.
"Operations such as this sometimes suffer certain kinds of internal
setbacks. Usually these… setbacks happen to certain personnel. These setbacks
are planned by operation directors, such as yourself, and they are meant to be
permanent. The common term for such a setback is double cross. If I were my
director, I would be most careful to avoid any such setback, don't you
agree?" The pallor crossing the other man's face told Levine there was no
disagreement. Levine smiled politely, nodded farewell, and walked away. The
distinguished man watched him stalk down the marble corridors and out of sight.
The gentleman shuddered slightly, then went home to Sunday brunch with his
wife, son, and a fidgety new daughter-in-law.
* * *
While Malcolm and Wendy dressed and the two men left the
Capitol grounds, a telephone truck pulled up to the outer gates at Langley.
After the occupants and their mission were cleared, they proceeded to the
communications center. The two telephone repairmen were accompanied by a
special security officer on loan from another branch. Most of the Agency men
were looking for a man called Condor. The security officer had papers
identifying him as Major David Burros. His real name was Kevin Powell, and the
two telephone repairmen, ostensibly there to check the telephone tracing
device, were highly trained Air Force electronics experts flown in from Colorado
less than four hours before. After their mission was completed, they would be
quarantined for three weeks. In addition to checking the tracing device, they
installed some new equipment and made some complicated adjustments in the
wiring of the old. Both men tried to keep calm while they worked from wiring
diagrams labeled Top Secret. Fifteen minutes after they began work, they
electronically signaled a third man in a phone booth four miles away. He called
a number, let it ring until he received another signal, then hung up and walked
quickly away. One of the experts nodded at Powell. The three men gathered their
tools and left as unobtrusively as they had come.
An hour later Powell sat in a small room in downtown
Washington. Two plainclothes policemen sat outside the door. Three of his
fellow agents lounged in chairs scattered around the room. There were two
chairs at the desk where Powell sat, but one was unoccupied. Powell talked into
one of the two telephones on the desk.
"We're hooked up and ready to go, sir. We've tested the
device twice. It checked out from our end and our man in the Panic Room said
everything was clear there. From now on, all calls made to Condor's panic
number will ring here. If it's our boy, we'll have him. If it's not… Well,
let's hope we can fake it. Of course, we can also nullify the bypass and just
listen in."
The old man's voice told his delight. "Excellent, my
boy, excellent. How's everything else working out?"
"Marian says the arrangements with the Post should be
complete within the hour. I hope you realize how much our ass is in the fire on
this. Someday we'll have to tell the Agency we tapped their Panic Line, and
they won't appreciate that at all."
The old man chuckled. "Don't worry about that, Kevin.
It's been in the fire before and it will be there again. Besides, theirs is
roasting too, and I imagine they won't feel too bad if we pull it out for them.
Any reports from the field?"
"Negative. Nobody reports a sign of Malcolm or the
girl. When our boy goes to ground, he goes to ground."
"Yes, I was thinking much the same thing myself. I
don't think the opposition has got him. I'm rather proud of his efforts so far.
Do you have my itinerary?"
"Yes, sir. We'll call you if anything happens."
The old man hung up, and Powell settled down for what he hoped would be a short
wait.
* * *
Wendy and Malcolm arrived in Washington just as the sun was
setting. Malcolm drove to the center of the city. He parked the car at the
Lincoln Memorial, removed their luggage, and locked the vehicle securely. They
came into Washington via Bethesda, Maryland. In Bethesda they purchased some
toiletries, clothes, a blond wig, and a large padded "visual disguise and
diversionary" bra for Wendy, a roll of electrical tape, some tools, and a
box of .357 magnum shells.
Malcolm took a carefully calculated risk. Using Poe's
"Purloined Letter" principle that the most obvious hiding place is
often the safest, he and Wendy boarded a bus for Capitol Hill. They rented a
tourist room on East Capitol Street less than a quarter of a mile from the
Society. The proprietress of the dingy hostel welcomed the Ohio honeymooners.
Most of her customers had checked out and headed home after a weekend of
sightseeing. She didn't even care if they had no rings and the girl had a black
eye. In order to create a believable image of loving young marrieds (or so
Malcolm whispered), the young couple retired early.
In war it is not men, but the man
who counts.
—Napoleon
Chapter 7
Monday, Morning to MidAfternoon
The shrill scream from the red phone jarred Powell from his
fitful nap. He grabbed the receiver before a second ring. The other agents in
the room began to trace and record the call. Concentrating on listening, Powell
only half saw their scurrying figures in the morning light. He took a deep
breath and said, "493-7282."
The muffled voice on the other end seemed far away.
"This is Condor."
Powell began the carefully prepared dialogue. "I read
you, Condor. Listen closely. The Agency has been penetrated. We're not sure
who, but we're pretty sure it's not you." Powell cut the beginning of a
protest short. "Don't waste time protesting your innocence. We accept it
as a working assumption. Now, why did you shoot Weatherby when they came to
pick you up?"
The voice on the other end was incredulous. "Didn't
Sparrow IV tell you? That man— Weatherby? —shot at me! He was parked outside
the Society Thursday morning. In the same car."
"Sparrow IV is dead, shot in the alley."
"I didn't…"
"We know. We think Weatherby did. We know about you and
the girl." Powell paused to let this sink in. "We traced you to her
apartment and found the corpse. Did you hit him?"
"Barely. He almost got us."
"Are you injured?"
"No, just a little stiff and woozy."
"Are you safe?"
"For the time being, fairly."
Powell leaned forward tensely and asked the hopeless and
all-important question. "Do you have any idea why your group was
hit?"
"Yes." Powell's sweaty hand tightened on the
receiver as Malcolm quickly told of the missing books and financial
discrepancies Heidegger had discovered.
When Malcolm paused, Powell asked in a puzzled voice,
"But you have no idea what it all means?"
"None. Now, what are you going to do about getting us
to safety?"
Powell took the plunge. "Well, that's going to be a
little problem.
Not just because we don't want you set up and hit, but
because you're not talking to the Agency."
Five miles away, in a phone booth at a Holiday Inn,
Malcolm's stomach began to churn. Before he could say anything, Powell spoke
again.
"I can't go into the details. You will simply have to
trust us. Because of the penetration of the Agency at what is probably a very
high level, we've taken over. We plugged into the Panic Line and intercepted
your call. Please don't hang up. We've got to blow the double in the Agency and
find out what this was all about. You're our only way, and we want you to help
us. You have no choice."
"Bullshit, man! You might be another security agency,
and then again you might not. Even if you are OK, why the hell should I help
you? This isn't my kind of work! I read about this stuff, not do it."
"Consider the alternatives." Powell's voice was
cold. "Your luck can't hold forever, and some very determined and
competent people besides us are looking for you. As you said, this isn't your
line of work. Someone will find you. Without us, all you can do is hope that
the right someone does find you. If we're the right someone, then everything is
already OK. If we're not, then at least you know what we want you to do. It's
better than running blind. Any time you don't like our instructions, don't
follow them. There's one final clincher. We control your communication link with
the Agency. We even have a man on the listed line." (This was a lie.)
"The only other way you can go home is to show up at Langley in person. Do
you like the idea of going in there cold?"
Powell paused and got no answer. "I thought not. It
won't be too dangerous. All we basically want is for you to stay hidden and
keep rattling the opposition's cage. Now, here's what we know so far."
Powell gave Malcolm a concise rundown of all the information he had. Just as he
finished, his man in charge of tracing the call came to him and shrugged his
shoulders. Puzzled, Powell continued. "Now, there's another way we can
communicate with you. Do you know how to work a book code?"
"Well… You better go over it again."
"OK. First of all pick up a paperback copy of The Feminine Mystique. There is only one
edition. Got that? OK. Now, whenever we want to communicate with you, we will
run an ad in the Post. It will appear in the first section, and the heading
will read, 'Today's Lucky Sweepstakes Winning Numbers Are:' followed by a
series of hyphenated numbers. The first number of each series is the page
number, the second is the line number, and the third is the word number. When
we can't find a corresponding word in the book, we'll use a simple
number-alphabet code. A is number one, B is number two, and so on. When we code
such a word, the first number will be thirteen. The Post will forward any communication you want to send us if you
address it to yourself, care of Lucky Sweepstakes, Box 1, Washington Post. Got it?"
"Fine. Can we still use the Panic Line?"
"We'd rather not. It's very chancy."
Powell could see the trace man across the room whispering
furiously into another phone. Powell said, "Do you need anything?"
"No. Now, what is it you want me to do?"
"Can you call the Agency back on your phone?"
"For a conversation as long as this?"
"Definitely not. It should only take a minute or
so."
"I can, but I'll want to shift to another phone. Not
for at least half an hour."
"OK. Call back and we will let the call go through.
Now, here's what we want you to say." Powell told him the plan. When both
men were satisfied, Powell said, "One more thing. Pick a neighborhood you
won't have to be in."
Malcolm thought for a moment. "Chevy Chase."
"OK," Kevin said. "You will be reported in
the Chevy Chase area in exactly one hour. Thirty minutes later a Chevy Chase
cop will be wounded while chasing a man and a woman answering your
descriptions. That should make everyone concentrate their forces in Chevy
Chase, giving you room to move. Is that enough time?"
"Make it an hour later, OK?"
"OK."
"One more thing. Who am I talking to, I mean
personally?"
"Call me Rogers, Malcolm." The connection went
dead. No sooner had Powell placed the phone in the cradle than his trace man
ran to him.
"Do you know what that little son of a bitch did? Do
you know what he did?" Powell could only shake his head. "I'll tell
you what he did, that little son of a bitch. He drove all over town and wired
pay phones together, then called and hooked them all up so they transmitted one
call through the lines, but each phone routed the call back through the
terminal. We traced the first one in a little over a minute. Our surveillance
team got there right away. They found an empty phone booth with homemade Out of
Order signs and his wiring job. They had to call back for a trace on the other
phone. We've gone through three traces already and there are probably more
hookups to go, that son of a bitch!"
Powell leaned back and laughed for the first time in days.
When he found the part in Malcolm's dossier that mentioned his summer
employment with the telephone company, he laughed again.
* * *
Malcolm left the phone booth and walked to the parking lot.
In a rented U-Haul pickup with Florida plates a chesty blonde wearing
sunglasses sat chewing gum. Malcolm stood in the shade for a few moments while
he checked the lot. Then he walked over and climbed in the truck. He gave Wendy
the thumbs-up sign, then began to chuckle.
"Hey," she said, "what is it? What's so
funny?"
"You are, you dummy."
"Well, the wig and the falsies were your idea! I can't
help it if…" His protesting hand cut her short.
"That's only part of it," he said, still laughing.
"If you could only see yourself."
"Well, I can't help it if I'm good." She slumped
in the seat. "What did they say?"
As they drove to another phone booth, Malcolm told her.
* * *
Mitchell had been manning the Panic phone since the first
call.
His cot lay a few feet from his desk. He hadn't seen the sun
since Thursday. He hadn't showered. When he went to the bathroom the phone
followed. The head of the Panic Section was debating whether to give him pep
shots. The Deputy Director had decided to keep Mitchell on the phone, as he stood
a better chance than a new man of recognizing Malcolm should he call again.
Mitchell was tired, but he was still a tough man. Right now he was tough determined man. He was raising his
ten-o'clock coffee to his lips when the phone rang. He spilled the coffee as he
grabbed the receiver.
"493-7282."
"This is Condor."
"Where the hell…"
"Shut up. I know you're tracing this call, so there
isn't much time. I would stay on your line, but the Agency has been
penetrated."
"What!"
"Somebody out there is a double. The man in the
alley" —Malcolm almost slipped and said "Weatherby" — "shot
at me first. I recognized him from when he was parked in front of the Society
Thursday morning. The other man in the alley must have told you that, though, so…"
Malcolm slowed, anticipating interruption. He got it.
"Sparrow IV was shot. You…"
"I didn't do it! Why would I want to do it? Then you
didn't know?"
"All we know is we have two more dead people than when
you first called."
"I might have killed the man who shot at me, but I didn't
kill Maronick."
"Who?"
"Maronick, the man called Sparrow IV."
"That wasn't Sparrow IV's name."
"It wasn't? The man I shot yelled for Maronick after he
hit the ground. I figured Maronick was Sparrow IV." (Easy, thought
Malcolm, don't overdo it.) "Never mind that now, time is running short.
Whoever hit us was after something Heidegger knew. He told all of us about
something strange he found in the records. He said he was going to tell
somebody out at Langley. That's why I figure there is a double. Heidegger told
the wrong man.
"Listen, I've stumbled onto something. I think I might
be able to figure some more out. I found something at Heidegger's place. I
think I can work it out if you give me time. I know you must be looking for me.
I'm afraid to come in or let you find me. Can you pull the heat off me until I
figure out what I know that makes the opposition want me dead?"
Mitchell paused for a moment. The trace man frantically
signaled him to keep Malcolm talking. "I don't know if we can or not.
Maybe if…"
"There's no more time. I'll call you back when I find
out some more." The line went dead. Mitchell looked at his trace man and
got a negative shake of the head.
"How the hell do you figure that?"
Mitchell looked at the speaker, a security guard. The man in
the wheelchair shook his head. "I don't but it's not my job to figure it.
Not this one." Mitchell looked around the room. His glance stopped when it
came to a man he recognized as a veteran agent. "Jason, does the name
Maronick mean anything to you?"
The nondescript man called Jason slowly nodded his head.
"It rings a bell."
"Me too," said Mitchell. He picked up a phone.
"Records? I want everything you got on people called Maronick, any
spelling you can think of. We'll probably want several copies before the day is
out, so hop to it." He broke the connection, then dialed the number of the
Deputy Director.
While Mitchell waited to be connected with the Deputy
Director, Powell connected with the old man. "Our boy did fine, sir."
"I'm delighted to hear that, Kevin, delighted."
In a lighter voice Powell said, "Just enough truth
mingled with some teasing tidbits. It'll start the Agency rolling the right
way, but hopefully they won't catch up to us. If you're right, our friend
Maronick may begin to feel nervous. They'll be more anxious than ever to find
our Condor. Anything new on your end?"
"Nothing. Our people are still digging into the past of
all concerned. Outside of us, only the police know about the connection between
Malcolm and the man killed in the girl's apartment. The police are officially
listing it and her disappearance as parts of a normal murder case. When the
time is right, that little tidbit will fall into appropriate hands. As far as I
can tell, everything is going exactly according to plan. Now I suppose I'll have
to go to another dreary meeting with a straight face, gently prodding our
friends in the right direction. I think it best if you stay on the line,
monitoring, not intercepting, but be ready to move any time."
"Right, sir." Powell hung up. He looked at the
grinning men in the room and settled back to enjoy a cup of coffee.
* * *
"I'll be damned if I can make head or tail of it!"
The Navy captain thumped his hand on the table to emphasize his point, then
leaned back in his spacious padded chair. The room was stuffy. Sweat stains
grew under the Captain's armpits. Of all the times for the air conditioning to
break down, he thought.
The Deputy Director said patiently, "None of us are
really too sure what it means, either, Captain." He cleared his throat to
take up where he had been cut off. "As I was saying, except for the
information we received from Condor— however accurate it may be— we are really
no further than at our last meeting."
The Captain leaned to his right and embarassed the man from
the FBI sitting next to him by whispering, "Then why call the God damn
meeting?" The withering glance from the Deputy Director had no effect on
the Captain.
The Deputy continued. "As you know, Maronick's file is
missing. We've requested copies of England's files. An Air Force jet should
have them here in three hours. I would like any comments you gentlemen might
have."
The man from the FBI spoke immediately. "I think Condor
is partially right. The CIA has been penetrated." His colleague from the
Agency squirmed. "However, I think we should put it in the past tense and
say 'had' been penetrated. Obviously Weatherby was the double. He probably used
the Society as some sort of courier system and Heidegger stumbled onto it. When
Weatherby found out, the Society had to be hit. Condor was a loose end that had
to be tied up. Weatherby goofed. There are probably some members of his cell
still running around, but I think fate has sealed the leak. As I see it, the
important thing for us to do now is bring in Condor. With the information he
can give us, we can try to pick up those few remaining men— including this
Maronick, if he exists— and find out how much information we've lost."
The Deputy Director looked around the room. Just as he was
about to close the meeting, the old man caught his eye.
"Might I make an observation or two, Deputy?"
"Of course, sir. Your comments are always
welcome."
The men in the room shifted slightly to pay better
attention. The Captain shifted too, though obviously out of frustrated
politeness.
Before he spoke, the old man looked curiously at the
representative from the FBI. "I must say I disagree with our colleague
from the Bureau. His explanation is very plausible, but there are one or two
discrepancies I find disturbing. If Weatherby was the top agent, then how and
why did he die? I know it's a debatable question, at least until the lab men
finish those exhaustive tests they've been making. I'm sure they will find he
was killed. That kind of order would have to come down from a high source.
Besides, I feel there is something wrong with the whole double agent-courier
explanation. Nothing for sure, just a hunch. I think we should continue pretty
much as we have been, with two slight changes.
"One, pry into the background of all concerned and look
for crossing paths. Who knows what we may find? Two, let's give the Condor a
chance to fly. He may find something yet. Loosen up the hunt for him, and
concentrate on the background search. I have some other ideas I would like to
work on for your next meeting, if you don't mind. That's all I have now. Thank
you, Deputy."
"Thank you, sir. Of course, gentlemen, the ultimate
decision lies with the director of the Agency. However, I've been assured our
recommendations will carry weight. Until we have a definite decision, I plan to
continue as we have been."
The old man looked at the Deputy Director and said,
"You may be sure we shall give you whatever assistance we can."
Immediately the FBI man snapped, "That goes for us
too!" He glared at the old man and received a curious smile in reply.
"Gentlemen," said the Deputy Director, "I
would like to thank all of you for the assistance you have given us, now as
well as in the past. Thank you all for coming. You'll be notified of the next
meeting. Good day."
As the men were leaving, the FBI man glanced at the old man.
He found himself staring into a pair of bright, curious eyes. He quickly left
the room. On the way out, the Navy captain turned to mutter to a representative
from the Treasury Department, "Jesus, I wish I had stayed on line duty!
These dull meetings wear me out." He snorted, put on his naval cap, and
strode from the room. The Deputy was the last to leave.
"I don't like this at all."
The two men strolled along the Capitol grounds just on the
edges of the shifting crowds. The afternoon tourist rush was waning, and some
government workers were leaving work early. Monday is a slow day for Congress.
"I don't like it, either, my fine friend, but we have
to contend with the situation as it is, not as we wish it." The older man
surveyed his striking companion and continued, "However, we at least know
a little more than before. For example, we know now how important it is that
Condor dies."
"I think he shouldn't be the only one." The rare
Washington wind carried the striking man's voice to his companion, who shivered
in spite of the warm weather.
"What do you mean?"
The reply was tinged with disgust. "It doesn't make
sense. Weatherby was a tough, experienced agent. Even though he was shot, he
managed to kill Sparrow IV. Do you really believe a man like that would yell
out my name? Even if he made a slip, why would he yell for me? It doesn't make
sense."
"Pray tell, then, what does make sense?"
"I can't say for sure. But there's something we don't
know going on. Or at least something I don't know."
Nervous shock trembled in the distinguished man's voice.
"Surely you're not suggesting I'm withholding information from you?"
The wind filled the long pause. Slowly, Levine-Maronick
answered. "I don't know. I doubt it, but the possibility exists. Don't
bother to protest. I'm not moving on the possibility. But I want you to
remember our last conversation."
The men walked in silence for several minutes. They left the
Capitol grounds and began to stroll leisurely past the Supreme Court Building
on East Capitol Street. Finally the older man broke the silence. "Do your
men have anything new?"
"Nothing. We've been monitoring all the police calls
and communications between the Agency and Bureau teams. With only three of us,
we can't do much field work. My plan is to intercept the group that picks
Condor up before they get him to a safe house. Can you arrange for him to be
brought to a certain one, or at least find out what advance plans they've made?
It will cut down on the odds quite a bit." The older man nodded, and
Maronick continued.
"Another thing that strikes me wrong is Lloyd. The
police haven't linked him with this thing yet, as far as I can tell. Condor's prints
must have been all over that place, yet the police either haven't lifted them—
which I doubt— or reported them on the APB. I don't like that at all. It
doesn't fit. Could you check on that in such a way that you don't stir them
into activity?"
The older man nodded again. The two men continued their
stroll, apparently headed home from work. By now they were three blocks from
the Capitol, well into the residential area. Two blocks down the street a city
bus pulled over to the side, belched diesel smoke, and deposited a small group
of commuters on the sidewalk. As the bus pulled away, two of the commuters
detached themselves from the group and headed toward the Capitol.
Malcolm had debated about turning in the rented pickup. It
gave them relatively private transportation, but it was conspicuous. Pickups
are not common in Washington, especially pickups emblazoned with
"Alfonso's U-Haul, Miami Beach." The truck also ran up a bill, and
Malcolm wanted to keep as much of his money in reserve as he could. He decided
public transportation would suffice for the few movements he planned. Wendy
halfheartedly agreed. She liked driving the pickup.
It happened when they were almost abreast of the two men
walking toward them on the other side of the street. The gust of wind proved
too strong for the bobby pin holding Wendy's loose wig. It jerked the blond
mass of hair from her head, throwing it into the street. The wig skidded to a
stop and lay in an ignoble heap almost in the center of the road.
Excited and shocked, Wendy cried out, "Malcolm, my wig!
Get it, get it!" Her shrill voice carried above the wind and the slight
traffic. Across the street Levine-Maronick pulled his companion to an abrupt
halt.
Malcolm knew Wendy had made a mistake by calling out his
name. He silenced her with a gesture as he stepped between the parked cars and
into the street on a retrieval mission. He noticed the two men across the
street watching him, so he tried to appear nonchalant, perhaps embarrassed for
his wife.
Levine-Maronick moved slowly but deliberately, his keen eyes
straining at the couple across the street, his mind making point-by-point
comparisons. He was experienced enough to ignore the shock of fantastic
coincidence and concentrate on the moment. His left hand unbuttoned his suit
coat. Out of the corner of his eye and in the back of his mind Malcolm saw and
registered all this, but his attention centered on the lump of hair at his
feet. Wendy reached him just as he straightened up with the wig in his hands.
"Oh, shit, the damned thing is probably ruined."
Wendy grabbed the tangled mass from Malcolm. "I'm glad we don't have far
to go. Next time I'll use two…"
Maronick's companion had been out of the field too long. He
stood on the sidewalk, staring at the couple across the street. His intent gaze
attracted Malcolm's attention just as the man incredulously mouthed a word.
Malcolm wasn't sure of what the man said, but he knew something was wrong. He
shifted his attention to the man's companion, who had emerged from behind a
parked car and begun to cross the street. Malcolm noticed the unbuttoned coat,
the waiting hand flat against the stomach.
"Run!" He pushed Wendy away from him and dove over
the parked sports car. As he hit the sidewalk, he hoped he was making a fool of
himself.
Maronick knew better than to run across an open area
charging a probably armed man hiding behind bulletproof cover. He wanted to
flush his quarry for a clear shot. He also knew part of his quarry was
escaping. That had to be prevented. When his arm stopped moving, his body had
snapped into the classic shooting stance, rigid, balanced. The stubby revolver
in his right hand barked once.
Wendy had taken four very quick steps when it occurred to
her she didn't know why she was running. This is silly, she thought, but she
slowed only slightly. She dodged between two parked cars and slowed to a jog.
Four feet from the shelter of a row of tour buses she turned her head, looking
over her left shoulder for Malcolm.
The steel-jacketed bullet caught her at the base of the skull.
It spun her up and around, slowly, like a marionette ballerina turning on one
tiny foot.
Malcolm knew what the shot meant, but he still had to look.
He forced his head to the left and saw the strange, crumpled form on the
sidewalk twenty feet away. She was dead. He knew she was dead. He had seen too
many dead people in the last few days to miss that look. A stream of blood
trickled downhill toward him. The wig was still clutched in her hand.
Malcolm had his gun out. He raised his head and Maronick's
revolver cracked again. The bullet screeched across the car's hood. Malcolm
ducked. Maronick quickly began to angle across the street. He had four rounds
left, and he allowed two of them for further harassing fire.
Capitol Hill in Washington has two ironic qualities: it has
both one of the highest crime rates and one of the highest concentrations of policemen
in the city. Maronick's shots and the screams of frightened tourists brought
one of the traffic policemen on the run. He was a short, portly man named
Arthur Stebbins. In five more years he planned to retire. He lurched toward the
scene of a possible crime with full confidence that a score of fellow officers
were only seconds behind him. The first thing he saw was a man edging across
the street, a gun in his hand. This was also the last thing he saw, for
Maronick's bullet caught him square in the chest.
Maronick knew he was in trouble. He had hoped for another
minute before the police arrived. By that time Condor would have been dead, and
he could be far away. Now he saw two more blue forms a block away. They were
tugging at their belts. Maronick swiftly calculated the odds, then turned,
looking for a way out.
At this instant a rather bored congressional aide heading
home from the Rayburn House Office Building drove up the side street just
behind Maronick. The aide stopped his red Volkswagen beetle to check for
traffic on the main artery. Like many motorists, he paid little attention to
the areas he passed through. He barely realized what happened when Maronick
jerked his door open, pulled him from the car, whipped the pistol across his
face, and then sped away in the beetle.
Maronick's companion stood still through the whole episode.
When he saw Maronick make his getaway, he too took flight. He ran up East
Capitol Street. Less than fifty feet from the scene he climbed into his black
Mercedes Benz and sped away. Malcolm raised his head in time to see the license
plate of the car.
Malcolm looked down the street to the policemen. They
huddled around the body of their comrade. One of them spoke into his belt
radio, calling in the description of Maronick and the red Volkswagen and asking
for reinforcements and an ambulance. It dawned on Malcolm that they hadn't seen
him yet, or that if they had, they thought of him as only a passerby-witness to
a police killing. He looked around him. The people huddled behind parked cars
and along the clipped grass were too frightened to yell until he was out of
sight. He quickly walked away in the direction the Volkswagen had come.
Just before he turned the corner he looked back at the
crumpled form on the sidewalk. A policeman was bending over Wendy's still body.
Malcolm swallowed and turned away. Three blocks later he caught a cab and
headed downtown. As he sat in the back seat, his body shook slightly, but his
mind burned.
The first step toward becoming a
skilful defensive player, then, is to handle the defense in an aggressive
spirit. If you do that, you can find subtle defensive resources that other
players would not dream of. By seeking active counterplay, you will often upset
clever attacking lines. Better yet, you will upset your opponent.
—Fred Reinfeld, The Complete Chess
Course
Chapter 8
Late Monday
"All hell has broken loose, sir." Powell's voice
reflected the futility he felt.
"What do you mean?" On the other end of the
telephone line the old man strained to catch every word.
"The girl has been shot on Capitol Hill. Two witnesses
tentatively identified that old photo of Maronick. They also identified the
girl's companion who fled as Malcolm. As far as we can tell, Malcolm wasn't
injured. Maronick got a cop, too."
"Killing two people in one day makes Maronick rather
busy."
"I didn't say she was dead, sir."
After an almost imperceptible pause the tight voice said,
"Maronick is not known for missing.
She is dead, isn't she?"
"No, sir, although Maronick didn't miss by much.
Another fraction of an inch and he would have splattered her brain all over the
sidewalk. As it is, she has a fairly serious head wound. She's in the Agency
hospital now. They had to do a little surgery. This time I made the security
arrangements. We don't want another Weatherby. She's unconscious. The doctors say
that she'll probably stay that way for a few days, but they think she'll
eventually be OK."
The old man's voice had an eager edge as he asked, "Was
she able to tell anyone anything, anything at all?"
"No, sir," Powell replied disappointedly.
"She's been unconscious since she was shot. I've got two of my men in her
room. Besides double-checking everyone who comes in, they're waiting in case
she wakes up.
"We've got another problem. The police are mad. They
want to go after Maronick with everything they've got. A dead cop and a wounded
girl on Capitol Hill mean more to them than our spy chase. I've been able to
hold them back, but I don't think I can for long. If they start looking using
the tie-ins they know, the Agency is bound to find out. What should I do?"
After a pause, the old man said, "Let them. Give them a
slightly sanitized report of everything we know, enough to give them some leads
on Maronick. Tell them to go after him with everything they can muster, and
tell them they'll have lots of help. The only thing we must insist on is first
questioning rights once they get him.
Insist on that, and tell them I can get authority to back up
our claim. Tell them to find Malcolm too. Does it look like Maronick was
waiting for them?"
"Not really. We found the boarding house used by
Malcolm and the girl. I think Maronick was in the neighborhood and just
happened to spot them. If it hadn't been for the police, he probably would have
nailed Condor. There's one other thing. One witness swears Maronick wasn't alone.
He didn't get a good look at the other man, but he says the guy was older than
Maronick. The older man disappeared."
"Any confirmation from other witnesses?"
"None, but I tend to belive him. The other man is
probably the main double we are after. The Hill is an excellent rendezvous.
That could explain Maronick stumbling onto Malcolm and the girl."
"Yes. Well, send me everything you can on Maronick's
friend. Can the witness make an ID sketch or a license-plate number?
Anything?"
"No, nothing definite. Maybe we'll get lucky and the
girl can help us with that if she wakes up soon."
"Yes," the old man said softly, "that would
be lucky."
"Do you have any instructions?"
The old man was silent for a few moments, then said,
"Put an ad— no, better make it two ads— in the Post. Our boy, wherever he is, will expect to hear from us. But
he's probably not too organized, so put a simple, uncoded ad to run on the same
page as the coded one. Tell him to get in touch with us. In the coded ad tell
him the girl is alive, the original plan is off, and we're trying to find some
way to bring him in safe. We'll have to take the chance that he either has or
can get a copy of the code book. We can't say anything important in the uncoded
ad because we don't know who else besides our boy might be reading the Post."
"Our colleagues will guess something is up when they
see the uncoded ad."
"That's an unpleasant fact, but we knew we would have
to face them eventually. However, I think I can manage them."
"What do you think Malcolm will do?"
There was another short pause before the old man replied.
"I'm not sure," he said. "A lot depends on what he knows. I'm
sure he thinks the girl is dead. He would have responded differently to the
situation if he thought she was alive. We may be able to use her somehow, as
bait for either Malcolm or the opposition. But we'll have to wait and see on
that."
"Anything else you want me to do?"
"A good deal, but nothing I can give you instructions
for. Keep looking for Malcolm, Maronick, and company, anything which might
explain this mess. And keep in touch with me, Kevin. After the meeting with our
colleagues, I'll be at my son's house for dinner."
* * *
"I think it's disgusting!" The man from the FBI
leaned across the table to glare at the old man. "You knew all along that
the murder in Alexandria was connected with this case, yet you didn't tell us.
What's worse, you kept the police from reporting it and handling it according
to form. Disgusting! Why, by now we could have traced Malcolm and the girl
down. They would both be safe. We would be hot after the others, provided, of
course, that we didn't already have them. I've heard of petty pride, but his is
national security! I can assure you, we at the Bureau would not behave in such
a manner!"
The old man smiled. He had told them only about the link
between Maronick and the murder in Alexandria. Imagine their anger if they
realized how much more he knew! He glanced at the puzzled faces. Time to mend
fences, or at least to rationalize. "Gentlemen, gentlemen, I can understand
your anger. But of course you realize I had a reason for my actions.
"As you all know, I believe there is a leak in the
Agency. A substantial leak, I might add. It was and is my opinion that this
leak would thwart our efforts on this matter. After all, the end goal— whether
we admit it or not— is to plug that very leak. Now, how was I to know that the
leak was not in this very group? We are not immune from such dangers." He
paused. The men around the table were too experinced to glance at each other,
but the old man could feel the tension rising. He congratulated himself.
"Now then," he continued, "perhaps I was
wrong to conceal so much from the group, but I think not. Not that I'm accusing
anyone— or, by the way, that I have abandoned the possibility of the leak's
being here. I still think my move prudent. I also believe it wouldn't have made
much difference, despite what our friend from the FBI says. I think we would
still be where we aree today. But that is not the question, at least not now. The
question is, Where do we go from here and how?"
The Deputy Director looked around the room. No one seemed
eager to respond to the old man's question. Of course, such a situation meant
he should pick up the ball. The Deputy dreaded such moments. One always had to
be so careful about stepping on toes and offending people. The Deputy felt far
more at ease on his field missions when he only had to worry about the enemy.
He cleared his throat and used a ploy he hoped the old man expected. "What
are your suggestions, sir?"
The old man smiled. Good old Darnsworth. He played the game
fairly well, but not very well. In a way he hated to do this to him. He looked
away from his old friend and stared into space. "Quite frankly, Deputy,
I'm at a loss for suggestions. I really couldn't say. Of course, I think we
should keep on trying to do something."
Inwardly the Deputy winced. He had the ball again. He looked
around the table at a group of men now suddenly not so competent and
eagerlooking. They looked everywhere but at him, yet he knew they were watching
his every move. The Deputy cleared his throat again. He resolved to end the
agony as quickly as possible. "As I see it, then, no one has any new
ideas. Consequently, I have decided that we will continue to operate in the
manner we have been." (Whatever that means, he thought.) "If there is
nothing further…" He paused only momentarily. "…I suggest we
adjourn." The Deputy shuffled his papers, stuffed them into his briefcase,
and quickly left the room.
As the others rose to leave, the Army Intelligence
representative leaned over to the Navy captain and said, "I feel like the
nearsighted virgin on his honeymoon who couldn't get hard: I can't see what to
do and I can't do it either."
The Navy captain looked at his counterpart and said, "I
never have that problem."
* * *
Malcolm changed taxis three times before he finally headed
for northeast Washington. He left the cab on the fringes of the downtown area
and walked around the neighborhood. During his ride around town he formed a
plan, rough and vague, but a plan. His first step was to find all-important
shelter from the hunters.
It took only twenty minutes. He saw her spot him and
discreetly move in a path parallel to his. She crossed the street at the
corner. As she stepped up to the sidewalk she "tripped" and fell
against him, her body pressed close to his. Her arms ran quickly up and down
his sides. He felt her body tense when her hands passed over the gun in his
belt. She jerked away and a pair of extraordinarily bright brown eyes darted
over his face.
"Cop?" From her voice she couldn't have been more
than eighteen. Malcolm looked down at her stringy dyed blond hair and pale
skin. She smelled from the perfume sampler at the corner drugstore.
"No." Malcolm looked at the frightened face.
"Let's say I'm involved in a high-risk business." He could see the
fear on her face, and he knew she would take a chance.
She leaned against him again, pushing her hips and her chest
forward. "What are you doing around here?"
Malcolm smiled. "I want a lay. I'm willing to pay for
it. Now, if I'm a cop, the bust is no good, cause I entrapped you. OK?"
She smiled. "Sure, tiger. I understand. What kind of
party are we going to have?"
Malcolm looked down at her. Italian, he thought, or maybe
Central European. "What do you charge?"
The girl looked at him, judging possibilities. It had been a
slow day. "Twenty dollars for a straight lay?" She made it clear she
was asking, not demanding.
Malcolm knew he had to get off the streets soon. He looked
at the girl. "I'm in no hurry," he said. "I'll give you…
seventy-five for the whole night. I'll throw in breakfast if we can use your
place."
The girl tensed. It might take her a whole day and half the
night o make that kind of money. She decided to gamble. Slowly she moved her
hand into Malcolm's crotch, covering her action by leaning into him, pushing
her breast against his arm. "Hey, honey, that sounds great, but…" She
almost lost her nerve. "Could you make it a hundred? Please? I'll be
extra-special good to you."
Malcolm looked down and nodded. "A hundred dollars. For
the full night at your place." He reached in his pocket and handed her a
fifty-dollar bill. "Half now, half afterwards. And don't think about any
kind of setup."
The girl snatched the money from his hand. "No setup.
Just me. And I'll be real good— real good. My place isn't far." She linked
her arm in his to guide him down the street.
When they reached the next corner, she whispered, "Just
a second, honey, I have to talk to that man." She released his arm before
he could think and hurried to the blind pencil hawker on the corner. Malcolm
backed against the wall. His hand shot inside his coat. The gun butt was
sweaty.
Malcolm saw the girl slip the man the fifty dollars. He
mumbled a few words. She walked quickly to a nearby phone booth, almost
oblivious of a boy who jostled her and grinned as her breasts bounced. The sign
said Out of Order, but she opened the door anyway. She looked through the book,
or so Malcolm thought. He couldn't see too well, as her back was toward him.
She shut the door and quickly returned.
"Sorry to keep you waiting, honey. Just a little
business deal. You don't mind, do you?"
When they came abreast of the blind man, Malcolm stopped and
pushed the girl away. He snatched the thick sunglasses off the man's face.
Carefully watching the astonished girl, he looked at the pencil seller. The two
empty sockets made him push the glasses back quicker than he had taken them
off. He stuffed a ten-dollar bill into the man's cup. "Forget it, old
man."
The hoarse voice laughed. "It's done forgotten,
mister."
As they walked away, the girl looked at him. "What did
you do that for?"
Malcolm looked down at the puzzled, dull face. "Just
checking."
Her place turned out to be one room with a kitchen-bath
area. As soon as they were safely inside, she bolted and locked the door.
Malcolm fastened the chain. "Be right with you, honey. Take off your
clothes. I'll fix you up real good right away." She darted into the
curtained-off bathroom area.
Malcolm looked out the window. Three stories up. No one
could climb in. Fine. The door was solid and double-locked. He didn't think
anyone had followed them, or even really noticed them. He slowly took off his
clothes. He put the gun on the small table next to the bed and covered it with
an old Reader's Digest. The bed
squeaked when he lay down. Both his mind and his body ached, but he knew he had
to act as normal as possible.
The curtains parted and she came to him, her eyes shining.
She wore a long-sleeved black nightgown. The front hung open. Her breasts
dangled— long, skinny pencils. The rest of her body matched her breasts,
skinny, almost emaciated. Her voice was distant. "Sorry I took so long,
sugar. Let's get down to business."
She climbed on the bed and pulled his head to her breasts.
"There, baby, there you go." For a few minutes she ran her hands over
him, then she said, "Now I'll take real good care of you." She moved
to the base of the bed and buried her head in his crotch. Minutes later she
coaxed his body into a response. She got up and went to the bathroom. She
returned holding a jar of Vaseline. "Oh, baby, you were real good, real
good, sugar." She lay down on the bed to apply the lubricant to herself.
"There, sugar, all ready for you. All ready for you whenever you
want."
For a long time they lay there. Malcolm finally looked at
her. Her body moved slowly, carefully, almost laboriously. She was asleep. He
went to the bathroom. On the back of the stained toilet he found the spoon,
rubber hose, matches, and homemade syringe. The small plastic bag was still
three-quarters full of the white powder. Now he knew why the nightgown had long
sleeves.
Malcolm searched the apartment. He found four changes of
underwear, three blouses, two skirts, two dresses, a pair of jeans, and a red
sweater to match the purple one laying on the floor. A torn raincoat hung in
the closet. In a shoe box in the kitchen he found six of the possession return
receipts issued upon release from a Washington jail. He also found a
two-year-old high-school identification card. Mary Ruth Rosen. Her synagogue
address was neatly typed on the back. There was nothing to eat except five
Hersheys, some coconut, and a little grapefruit juice. He ate everything. Under
the bed he found an empty Mogen David 20/20 wine bottle. He propped it against
the door. If his theory worked, it would crash loudly should the door open. He
picked up her inert form. She barely stirred. He put her on the torn armchair
and threw a blanket over the limp bundle. It wouldn't make any difference if
her body wasn't comfortable in the night. Malcolm took out his lenses and lay
down on the bed. He was asleep in five minutes.
In almost every game of chess there
comes a crisis that must be recognized. In one way or another a player risks
something— if he knows what he's doing, we call it a 'calculated
risk.'
If you understand the nature of this
crisis; if you perceive how you've committed yourself to a certain line of
play; if you can foresee you've committed yourself to a certain line of play;
if you can foresee the nature of your coming task and its accompanying
difficulties, all's well. But if this awareness is absent, then the game will
be lost for you, and fighting back will do no good.
—Fred Reinfeld, The Complete Chess
Course
Chapter 9
Tuesday, Morning through Early
Evening
Malcolm woke shortly after seven. He lay quietly until just
before eight, his mind going over all the possibilities. In the end he still
decided to carry it through. He glanced at the chair. The girl had slid onto
the floor during the night. The blanket was wrapped over her head and she was
breathing hard.
Malcolm got up. With a good deal of clumsy effort he put her
on the bed. She didn't stir through the whole process.
The bathroom had a leaky hose and nozzle hooked up to the
tub, so Malcolm took a tepid shower. He successfully shaved with the slightly
used safety razor. He desperately wanted to brush his teeth, but he couldn't
bring himself to use the girl's toothbrush.
Malcolm looked at the sleeping form before he left the
apartment. Their agreement had been for a hundred dollars, and he had only paid
her fifty. He knew where that money went. Reluctantly, he laid the other fifty
dollars on the dresser. It wasn't his money anyway.
Three blocks away he found a Hot Shoppe where he breakfasted
in the boisterous company of neighbors on their way to work. After he left the
restaurant he went to a drugstore. In the privacy of a Gulf station rest room
he brushed his teeth. It was 9:38.
He found a phone booth. With change from the Gulf station he
made his calls. The first one was to Information and the second one connected
him with a small office in Baltimore.
"Bureau of Motor Vehicle Registration. May I help
you?"
"Yes." Malcolm replied. "My name is Winthrop
Estes, of Alexandria. I was wondering if you could help me pay back a
favor."
"I'm not sure what you mean."
"You see, yesterday as I was driving home from work my
battery tipped over right in the middle of the street. I got it hooked up
again, but there wasn't enough charge to fire the engine. Just as I was about
to give up and try to push the thing out of the way, this man in a Mercedes
Benz pulled up behind me. At great risk to his own car, he gave me the push
necessary to get mine started. Before I had a chance to even thank him, he
drove away. All I got was his license number. Now, I would at least like to
send him a thankyou note or buy him a drink or something. Neighborly things
like that don't happen very often in D.C."
The man on the other end of the line was touched. "They
certainly don't. With his Mercedes! Phew, that's some nice guy! Let me guess.
He had Maryland plates and you want me to check and see who he is, right?"
"Right. Can you do it?"
"Well… Technically no, but for something like this,
what's little technicality? Do you have the number?"
"Maryland 6E-49387."
"6E-49387. Right. Hold on just one second and I'll have
it." Malcolm heard the receiver clunk on a hard surface. In the
background, footsteps faded into a low office murmur of typewriters and obscure
voices, then grew stronger. "Mr. Estes? We've got it. Black Mercedes
sedan, registered to a Robert T. Atwood, 42 Elwood— that's E-l-w-o-o-d— Lane,
Chevy Chase. Those people must really be loaded. That's the country-squire suburb. He could probably afford a scratch or
two on his car. Funny, those people usually don't give a damn, if you know what
I mean."
"I know what you mean. Listen, thanks a lot."
"Hey, don't thank me. For something like this, glad to
do it. Only don't let it get around, know what I mean? Might tell Atwood the
same thing, OK?"
"OK."
"You sure you got it? Robert Atwood, 42 Elwood Lane,
Chevy Chase?"
"I've got it. Thanks again." Malcolm hung up and
stuffed the piece of paper with the address on it into his pocket. He wouldn't
need it to remember Mr. Atwood. For no real reason, he strolled back to the Hot
Shoppe for coffee. As far as his watchful eyes could tell, no one noticed him.
The morning Post
lay on the counter. On impulse he began to thumb through it. It was on page 12.
They hadn't taken any chances. The three-inch ad was set in bold type and read,
"Condor call home."
Malcolm smiled, hardly glancing at the coded sweepstakes ad.
If he called in, they would tell him to come home or at least lie low. That
wasn't what he intended. There was nothing they could say in the coded message
that could make any difference to him. Not now. Their instructions had lost all
value yesterday on Capitol Hill.
Malcolm frowned. If plan went wrong, the whole thing might
end unsatisfactorily. Undoubtedly that end would also mean Malcolm's death, but
that didn't bother him too much. What bothered him was the horrible waste
factor that failure mean. He had to tell someone, somehow, just in case. But he
couldn't let anyone know, not until he had tried. That meant delay. He had to
find a way of delayed communication.
The sign flashing across the street gave him the
inspiration. With the materials he had at hand he began to write. Twenty
minutes later he stuffed curt synopses of the last five days and a prognosis
for the future into three small envelopes begged from the waitress. The napkins
went to the FBI. The pieces of junk paper from his wallet filled the envelope
addressed to the CIA. The map of D.C. he had picked up at the Gulf station went
to the Post. These three envelopes
went into a large manila envelope he bought at the drugstore. Malcolm stuck the
big envelope in a mailbox. Pickup was scheduled for 2:00 p.m. The big envelope
was addressed to Malcolm's bank, which for some reason closed at 2:00 p.m. on
Tuesdays. Malcolm reckoned it would take the bank until at least tomorrow to
find and mail the letters. He had a minimum of twenty-four hours to operate in,
and he had passed on what he knew. He considered himself free of obligations.
* * *
While Malcolm spent the rest of the day standing in the
perpetually long line at the Washington Monument, security and law-enforcement
agencies all over the city were quietly going bananas. Detectives and agents
tripped over each other and false reports of Malcolm. Three separate carloads
of officials from three separate agencies arrived simultaneously at the same
boarding house check out three separate leads, all of which were false. The
proprietress of the boarding house still had no idea what happened after the
officials angrily drove away. A congressional intern who vaguely resembled
Malcolm's description was picked up and detained by an FBI patrol. Thirty
minutes after the intern was identified and released from federal custody, he
was arrested by Washington police and again detained. Reporters harassed
already nervous officials about the exciting Capitol Hill shootout.
Congressmen, senators, and political hacks of every shade kept calling the
agencies and each other, inquiring about the rumored security leak. Of course,
everyone refused to discuss it over the phone, but the senator- congressman-department
chief wanted to be personally briefed. Kevin Powell was trying once again to
play Condor and retrace Malcolm. As he walked along East Capitol Street,
puzzling, perturbing questions kept disturbing the lovely spring day. He
received no answers from the trees and buildings, and at 11:00 he gave up the
chase to meet the director of the hunt.
Powell was late, but when he walked quickly into the room he
did not receive a reproachful glance from the old man. Indeed, the old man's
congeniality seemed at a new height. At first Powell thought the warmth was
contrived for the benefit of the stranger who sat with them at the small table,
but he gradually decided it was genuine.
The stranger was one of the biggest men Powell had ever
seen. It was hard to judge his height while he sat, but Powell guessed he was
at least six feet seven. The man had a massive frame, with at least three
hundred pounds of flesh supplying extra padding beneath the expensively
tailored suit. The thick black hair was neatly greased down. Powell noticed the
man's little piggy eyes quietly, carefully taking stock of him.
"Ah, Kevin," said the old man, "how good of
you to join us. I don't believe you know Dr. Lofts."
Powell didn't know Dr. Lofts personally, but he knew the man's
work. Dr. Crawford Lofts was probably the foremost psychological diagnostician
in the world, yet his reputation was known only in very tightly controlled
circles. Dr. Lofts headed the Psychiatric Evaluation Team for the Agency. PET
came into its own when its evaluation of the Soviet Premier convinced President
Kennedy that he should go ahead with the Cuban blockade. Ever since then, PET
had been given unlimited resources to compile its evaluation of major world
leaders and selected individuals.
After ordering coffee for Powell, the old man turned and
said, "Dr. Lofts has been working on our Condor. For the last few days he
has talked to people, reviewed our boy's work and dossiers, even lived in his
apartment. Trying to build an action profile, I believe they call it. You can
explain it better, Doctor."
The softness of Loft's voice surprised Powell. "I think
you've about said it, old friend. Basically, I'm trying to find out what
Malcolm would do, given the background he has. About all I can say is that he
will improvise fantastically and ignore whatever you tell him unless it filts
into what he wants." Dr. Lofts did not babble about his work at every
opportunity. This too surprised Powell, and he was unprepared when Lofts
stopped talking.
"Uh, what are you doing about it?" Powell
stammered, feeling very foolish when he heard his improvised thoughts expressed
out loud.
The Doctor rose to go. At least six-seven. "I've got
field workers scattered at points throughout the city where Malcolm might turn
up. If you'll excuse me, I want to get back to supervising them." With a
curt, polite nod to the old man and Powell, Dr. Lofts lumbered from the room.
Powell looked at the old man. "Do you think he has much
of a chance?"
"No, no more than anyone else. That's what he thinks,
too. Too many variables for him to do much more than guess. The realization of
that limitation is what makes him good."
"Then why bring him in? We can get all the manpower we
want without having to pull in PET."
The old man's eyes twinkled, but there was coldness in his
voice. "Because, my dear boy, it never hurts to have a lot of hunters if
the hunters are hunting in different ways. I want Malcolm very badly, and I
don't want to miss a trick. Now, how are you coming from your end."
Powell told him, and the answer was the same as it had been
from the beginning: no progress.
* * *
At 4:30 Malcolm decided it was time to steal a car. He had
considered many other ways of obtaining transportation, but crossed them off
his list as too risky. Providence combined with the American Legion and a
Kentucky distillery to solve Malcolm's problem.
If it hadn't been for the American Legion and their National
Conference on Youth and Drugs, Alvin Phillips would never have been in
Washington, let alone at the Washington Monument. He was chosen by the Indiana
state commander to attend the expense-paid national conference to learn all he
could about the evils of drug abuse among the young. While at the conference,
he had been given a pass which would enable him to avoid the lines at the
Monument and go straight to the top. He lost this pass the night before, but he
felt obligated to at least see the Monument for the folks back home.
If it hadn't been for a certain Kentucky distillery, Alvin
would not have been in his present state of intoxication. The distillery kindly
provided all conference participants with a complimentary fifth of their best
whiskey. Alvin had become so upset by the previous day's film describing how
drugs often led to illicit sex among nubile teen-age girls that the night
before he drank the entire bottle by himself in his Holiday Inn room. He liked
the whiskey so much that he bought another fifth to help him through the
conference and "kill the dog that bit him." He finished most of that
fifth by the time the meetings broke up and he managed to navigate to the
Monument.
Malcolm didn't find Alvin, Alvin found the line. Once there,
he made it plain to all who could hear that he was standing in this hot God
damn sun out of patriotic duty. He didn't have to be here, he could have gone
right to the God damn top, except for that God damn hustling floozy who lifted
his wallet and the God damn pass. He sure fooled her God damn ass with those
traveler's checks— best God damn things you could buy. She sure had God damn
big jugs, though. God damn it, all he wanted to do was take her for a ride in
his new car.
When Malcolm heard the word "car," he immediately
developed a dislike for cheap God damn floozies and a strong affection for the
American Legion, Indiana, Kentucky whiskey, and Alvin's brand-new Chrysler.
After a few short introductory comments, he let Alvin know he was talking to a
fellow veteran of American wars, one whose hobby just happened to be
automobiles. Have another drink, Alvin, old buddy.
"S'at right? You really dig cars?" The mention of
important matters pulled Alvin part way out of the bottle. It didn't take a lot
of effort for bosom companionship to slide him back down. "You wanna see a
real good 'un? Got me a bran'-new one. Jus' drove't here from Indiana. Ever
been to Indiana? Gotta come, come see me. An' the old lady. She ain't much to
look at— we're forry-four, you know. I don't look forry-four, do I? Where was
I? Oh yeah, ol' lady. Good woman. A li'l fat, but what the hell, I always
say…"
By this time Malcolm had maneuvered Alvin away from the
crowd and into a parking lot. He had also shared half a dozen swigs from the
bottle Alvin carefully kept hidden under his soggy suit coat. Malcolm would
raise the bottle to his closed lips and move his Adam's apple in appreciation.
He didn't want alcohol slowing him down for the night. When Alvin took his
turn, he more than made up for Malcolm's abstention. By the time they reached
the parking lot, only two inches remained in the bottle.
Malcolm and Alvin talked about those God damn kids and their
God damn drugs. Especially the girls, the teen-age girls, just like the
cheerleaders in Indiana, hooked on that marijuana and ready to do anything,
"anything," for that God damn drug. Anything. Malcolm casually
mentioned that he knew where two such girls were hanging around, just waiting
to do anything for that God damn marijuana. Alvin stopped him and plaintively
said, "Really?" Alvin thought very hard when Malcolm ("John")
assured him that such was the case. Malcolm let the discussion lag, then he
helped Alvin suggest meeting these two girls so Alvin could tell the folks back
in Indiana what it was really like. Really like. Since the girls were in kind
of a public place, it probably would be best if "John" went and
picked them up and brought them back here. Then they could all go to Alvin's
room and talk. Better to talk to them there than here. Find out why they'd do
anything, anything, for that God damn
marijuana. Alvin gave Malcolm the keys just as they reached the shiny new car.
"Got lotsa gas, lotsa gas. Sure ya don't need any
money?" Alvin fumbled with his clothes and extracted a weather-beaten
wallet. "Take watcha need, bitch last night only got traveler's
checks." Malcolm took the wallet. While Alvin shakily tipped the bottle to
his lips, his new friend removed all identification papers from the wallet,
including a card with his car license number. He gave the wallet back to Alvin.
"Here," he said. "I don't think they'll want
any money. Not now." He smiled briefly, secretively. When Alvin saw the
smile his heart beat a shade faster. He was too far gone to show much facial
expression.
Malcolm unlocked the car. A crumpled blue cap lay on the
front seat. On the floor was a six-pack of beer Alvin had brought to help ease
the heat. Malcolm put the cap on his friend's head and exchanged the now empty
whiskey bottle for the six-pack of beer. He looked at the flushed face and
blurred eyes. Two hours in the sun and Alvin should pass out. Malcolm smiled
and pointed to a grassy mall.
"When I come back with the girls, we'll meet you over
there, then go to your room. You'll recognize us because they both have big
jugs. I'll be back with them just after you finish the six-pack. Don't worry
about a thing." With a kindly push he sent Alvin staggering off to the
park and the tender mercies of the city. When he pulled out of the parking lot,
he glanced at the rearview mirror in time to see Alvin lurch to a sitting
position on a portion of grass well away from anyone else. Malcolm turned the
corner as Alvin opened a beer can and took a long, slow swig.
The car had almost a full tank of gas. Malcolm drove to the
expressway circling the city. He stopped briefly at a drive-in restaurant in
Chevy Chase for a cheeseburger and use of the rest room. In addition to
relieving himself, he checked his gun.
Number 42 Elwood Lane was indeed a country estate. The house
was barely visible from the road. Direct access to it was through a private
lane closed off by a stout iron gate. The closest neighboring house was at
least a mile away. Dense woods surrounded the house on three sides. The land
between the house and the road was partially cleared. From Malcolm's brief
glance he could tell that the house was large, but he didn't stop for a closer
look. That would be foolish.
From a small gas station just up the road he obtained a map
of the area. The woods behind the house were uninhabited hills. When he told
the gas-station attendant he was a vacationing ornithologist and that he might
have seen a very rare thrush, the attendant helped him by describing some
unmapped country roads which might lead to the bird's nesting area. One such
road ran behind 42 Elwood Lane.
Because of the attendant's anxious help, Malcolm found the
proper road. Bumpy, unpaved, and with only traces of gravel, the road wound
around hills, through gullies, and over ancient cowpaths. The woods were so
dense that at times Malcolm could see only twenty feet from the road. His luck
held, though, and when he topped a hill he saw the house above the trees to his
left, at least a mile away. Malcolm pulled the car off the road, bouncing and
lurching into a small clearing.
The woods were quiet, the sky was just turning pink. Malcolm
quickly pushed his way through the trees. He knew he had to get close to the
house before all light faded or he would never find it.
It took him half an hour of hard work. As the day shifted
from sunset to twilight, he reached the top of a small hill. The house was just
below him, three hundred yards away. Malcolm dropped to the ground, trying to
catch his breath in the crisp, fresh air. He wanted to memorize all he could
see in the fading light. Through the windows of the house he caught fleeting
glimpses of moving figures. The yard was big, surrounded by a rock wall. There
was a small shed behind the house.
He would wait until dark.
* * *
Inside the house Robert Atwood sat back in his favorite easy
chair. While his body relaxed, his mind worked. He did not want to meet with
Maronick and his men tonight, especially not here. He knew the pressure was on
them, and he knew they would press him for some sort of alternate solution. At
present Atwood didn't have one. The latest series of events had changed the
picture considerably. So much depended on the girl. If she regained
consciousness and was able to identify him… well, would be unfortunate. It was
too risky to send Maronick after her, the security precautions were too tight.
Atwood smiled. On the other hand, the girl's survival might pose some
interesting and favorable developments, especially in dealing with Maronick.
Atwood's smile broadened. The infallible Maronick had missed. True, not by
much, but he had missed. Perhaps the girl, a living witness, might be useful
against Maronick. Just how Atwood
wasn't sure, but he decided it might be best if Maronick continued thinking the
girl was dead. She could be played later in the game. For the time being
Maronick must concentrate on finding Malcolm.
Atwood knew Maronick had insisted on meeting him at his home
in order to commit him even further. Maronick would make it a point to be seen
by someone in the neighborhood whom the police might later question should
things go wrong. In this way Maronick sought to further ensure Atwood's
loyalty. Atwood smiled. There were ways around that one. Perhaps the girl might
prove a useful lever there.
If…
"I'm going now, dear." Atwood turned toward the
speaker, a stocky gray-haired woman in an expensively cut suit. He rose and
walked with his wife to the door. When he was close to his wife, his eyes
invariably traveled to the tiny scars on her neck and the edge of her hairline
where the plastic surgeon had stretched and lifted years from her skin. He
smiled, wondering if the surgery and all her hours at an exclusive figure salon
made her lover's task any more agreeable.
Elaine Atwood was fifty, five years younger than her husband
and twenty-four years older than her lover. She knew the man who had driven her
wild and brought back her youth as Adrian Queens, a British graduate student at
American University. Her husband knew all about her lover, but he knew that
Adrian Queens was really Alexy Ivan Podgovich, an aspiring KGB agent who hoped
to milk the wife of a prominent American intelligence officer for information
necessary to advance his career. The "affair" between Podgovich and
his wife amused him and served his purposes very well. It kept Elaine busy and
distracted and provided him with an opportunity to make an intelligence coup of
his own. Such things never hurt a man's career, if he knows how to take
advantage of opportunity.
"I may just stay over at Jane's after the concert,
darling. Do you want me to call?"
"No, dear, I'll just assume you are with her if you
aren't home by midnight. Don't worry about me. Give Jane my love."
The couple emerged from the house. Atwood delivered a
perfunctory kiss to his wife's powdered cheek. Before she reached the car in
the driveway (a sporty American car, not the Mercedes) her mind was on her
lover and the long night ahead. Before Atwood closed the front door his mind
was back on Maronick.
Malcolm saw the scene in the doorway, although he couldn't
discern features at that distance. The wife's departure made his confidence
surge. He would wait thirty minutes.
Fifteen of that thirty minutes had elapsed when Malcolm
realized there were two men walking up the driveway toward the house. Their
figures barely stood out from the shadows. If it hadn't been for their motion,
Malcolm would never seen them. The only thing he could distinguish from his
distant perch was the tail leanness of one of the men. Something about the tall
man triggered Malcolm's subconscious, but he couldn't pull it to the surface.
The men, after ringing the bell, vanished inside the house.
With binoculars, Malcolm might have seen the men's car. They
had parked it just off the road inside the gate and walked the rest of the way.
Although he wanted to leave traces of his visit to Atwood's house, Maronick saw
no point in letting Atwood get a look at their car.
Malcolm counted to fifty, then began to pick his way toward
the house. Three hundred yards. In the darkness it was hard to see tree limbs
and creepers reaching to trip him and bring him noisily down. He moved slowly,
ignoring the scratches from thornbushes. Halfway to the house, Malcolm stumbled
over a stump, tearing his pants and wrenching his knee, but somehow he kept
from crying out. One hundred yards. A quick, limping dash through brush stubble
and long grass before he crouched behind the stone wall. Malcolm eased the
heavy magnum into his hand while he fought to regain his breath. His knee
throbbed, but he tried not to think about it. Over the stone wall lay the house
yard. In the yard to the right was the crumbling tool shed. A few scattered
evergreens stood between him and the house. To his left was blackness.
Malcolm looked at the sky. The moon hadn't risen yet. There
were few clouds and the stars shone brightly. He waited, catching his breath
and assuring himself his ears heard nothing unusual in the darkness. He vaulted
the low wall and ran to the nearest evergreen. Fifty yards.
A shadow quietly detached itself from the tool shed to
swiftly merge with an evergreen. Malcolm should have noticed. He didn't.
Another short dash brought Malcolm to within twenty-five
yards of the house. Glow from inside the building lit up all but a thin strip
of grass separating him and the next evergreen. The windows were low. Malcolm
didn't want to chance a fleeting glance to the outside catching him running
across the lawn. He sprawled to his belly and squirmed across the thin shadowed
strip. Ten yards. Through open windows he could hear voices. He convinced
himself different noises were his imagination playing on Mother Nature.
Malcolm took a deep breath and made a dash for the bush
beneath the open window. As he was taking his second step, he heard a huffing,
rushing noise. The back of his neck exploded into reverberating fire.
The truth, the whole truth, and
nothing but the truth.
—Traditional oath
Chapter 10
Late Tuesday Night, Early Wednesday
Morning
Consciousness returned abruptly to Malcolm. He felt a dim
awareness around his eyes, then suddenly his body telegraphed a desperate
message to his brain: he had to vomit. He lurched forward, up, and had his head
thrust into a thoughtfully provided bucket. When he stopped retching, he opened
his aching eyes to take in his plight.
Malcolm blinked to clear his contacts. He was sitting on the
floor of a very plush living room. In the opposite wall was a small fireplace.
Two men sat in easy chairs between him and that wall. The man who shot Wendy
and his companion. Malcolm blinked again.
He saw the outline of a man on his right. The man was very
tall and thin. As he turned to take a closer look, the man behind him jerked
Malcolm's head so he again faced the two seated men. Malcolm tried to move his
hands, but they were tied behind his back with a silk tie that would leave no
marks.
The older of the two men smiled, obviously very pleased with
himself. "Well, Condor," he said, "welcome to my nest."
The other man was almost impassive, but Malcolm thought he
saw curious amusement in the cold eyes.
The older man continued. "It has taken us a long time
to find you, dear Malcolm, but now that you are here, I'm really rather glad
our friend Maronick didn't shoot you too. I have some questions to ask you.
Some questions I already know the answers to, some I don't. This is the perfect
time to get those answers. Don't you agree?"
Malcolm's mouth was dry. The thin man held a glass of water
to his lips. When Malcolm finished, he looked at the two men and rasped,
"I have some questions too. I'll trade you answers."
The older man smiled as he spoke. "My dear boy. You
don't understand. I'm not interested in your questions. We won't even waste our
time with them. Why should I tell you anything? It would be so futile. No, you
shall talk to us. Is he ready yet, Cutler, or did you swing that rifle a little
too hard?"
The man holding Malcolm had a deep voice. "His head
should be clear by now." With a quick flick of his powerful wrists the man
pulled Malcolm down to the floor. The thin man pinned Malcolm's feet, and
Maronick pulled down Malcolm's pants. He inserted a hypodermic needle into
Malcolm's tensed thigh, sending the clear liquid into the main artery. It would
work quicker that way, and the odds that a coroner would notice a small
injection on the inside of a thigh are slim.
Malcolm knew what was happening. He tried to resist the
inevitable. He forced his mind to picture a brick wall, to feel a brick wall,
smell a brick wall, become a brick wall. He lost all sense of time, but the
bricks stood out. He heard the voices questioning him, but he turned their
sounds to bricks for his wall.
Then slowly, piece by piece, the truth serum chiseled away
at the wall. His interrogators carefully swung their hammers. Who are you? How
old are you? What is your mother's name? Small, fundamental pieces of mortar
chipped away. Then bigger hunks. Where do you work? What do you do? One by one,
bricks pried loose. What happened last Thursday? How much do you know? What
have you done about it? Why have you done it?
Little by little, piece by piece, Malcolm felt his wall
crumble. While he felt regret, he couldn't will the wreckage to stop. Finally
his tired brain began to wander. The questions stopped and he drifted into a
void. He felt a slight prick on his thigh and the void filled with numbness.
Maronick made a slight miscalculation. The mistake was
understandable, as he was dealing with milligrams of drugs to obtain results
from an unknown variable, but he should have erred on the side of caution. When
he secretly squirted out half the dosage in the syringe Atwood gave him,
Maronick thought he had still used enough to produce unconsciousness. He was a
little short. The drug combined with the sodium pentothal as predicted, but it
was only strong enough to cause stupor, not unconsciousness.
Malcolm was in a dream. His eyelids hung low over his
contacts, but they wouldn't shut. Sounds came to him through a stereo echo box.
His mind couldn't connect, but it could record.
—Shall we kill him now? (The deep voice.)
—No, on the scene.
—Who?
—I'll let Charles do it, he likes blood. Give him your
knife.
—Here, you give it to him. I'll check this again.
Receding footsteps. A door opens, closes. Hands running over
his body. Something brushes his face.
—Damn.
A pink slip of paper on the floor by his shoulder. The tears
fogging his contacts, but on the paper, "#27, TWA, National, 6 a.m."
The door opens, closes. Footsteps approaching.
—Where are Atwood and Charles?
—Checking the grounds in case he dropped anything.
—Oh. By the way, here's that reservation I made for you.
James Cooper.
Paper rustles.
—Fine, let's go.
Malcolm felt his body lift off the floor. Through rooms.
Outside to the cooling night air. Sweet smells, lilacs blooming. A car, into
the back seat. His mind began to record more details, close gaps. His body was
still lost, lying on the floor with a pair of heavy shoes pressed in his back.
A long, bumpy ride. Stop. Engine dies and car doors open.
—Charles, can you carry him into the woods, up that way,
maybe fifty yards. I'll bring the shovel in a few minutes. Wait until I get
there. I want it done a certain way.
A low laugh. —No trouble.
Up into the air, jammed onto a tall, bony shoulder, bouncing
over a rough trail, pain jarring life back into the body.
By the time the tall man dropped Malcolm on the ground,
consciousness had returned. His body was still numb, but his mind was working
and his eyes were bright. He could see the tall man smile in the dimly lit
night. His eyes found the source of the series of clicks and snaps cutting
through the humid air. The man was opening and closing the switchblade in eager
anticipation.
Twigs snapped and dead leaves crunched under a light foot.
The striking man appeared at the edge of the small clearing. His left hand held
a flashlight. The beam fell on Malcolm as he tried to rise. The man's right
hand hung close to his side. His clear voice froze Malcolm's actions. "Is
our Condor all right?"
The tall man broke in impatiently. "He's fine,
Maronick, as if it mattered. He sure came out of that drug quickly." The
thin man paused to lick his lips. "Are you ready now?"
The flashlight beam moved to the tall man's eager face.
Maronick's voice came softly through the night air. "Yes, I am." He
raised his right arm and with a soft plop!
from the silencer shot the tall man through the solar plexus.
The bullet buried itself in Charles's spine. The concussion
knocked him back on his heels, but he slumped forward to his knees, then to his
face. Maronick walked over to the long, limp form. To be very sure, he fired
one bullet through the head.
Malcolm's mind reeled. He knew what he saw, but he didn't
believe it. The man called Maronick walked slowly toward him. He bent over and
checked the bonds that held Malcolm's feet and hands. Satisfied, he sat on a
handily placed log, turned off the flashlight, and said, "Shall we
talk?"
"You stumbled into something and you blundered your way
through it. I must say I've developed a sort of professional admiration for you
during the last five days. However, that has nothing to do with my decision to
give you a chance to come out of this alive— indeed, a hero.
"In 1968, as part of their aid to a beleaguered,
anti-communist government, the CIA assisted certain Meo tribes in Laos with the
main commercial activity of that area, narcotics production. Mixed among all
the fighting going on in that area there was a war between competing commercial
factions. Our people assisted one faction by using transport planes to move the
unprocessed opiate product along its commercial route. The whole thing was very
orthodox from a CIA point of view, though I imagine there are many who frown on
the U.S. government pushing dope.
"As you know, such enterprises are immensely
profitable. A group of us, most of whom you have met, decided that the
opportunity for individual economic advancement was not to be overlooked. We
diverted a sizable quantity of unprocessed, high-quality morphine bricks from
the official market and channeled them into another source. We were well
rewarded for our labor.
"I disagreed with Atwood's handling of the matter from
the start. Instead of unloading the stuff in Thailand to local processing labs
and taking a reasonable profit, he insisted on exporting the morphine bricks
directly to the States and selling them to a U.S. group who wanted to avoid as
many middlemen as possible. To do that, we needed to use the Agency more than
was wise.
"We used your section for two purposes. We compromised
a bursar— not your old accountant— to juggle and later reujuggle the books and
get us seed money. We then shipped the morphine Stateside in classified book
cases. They fitted quite nicely into those boxes, and since they were shipped
as classified materials, we didn't have to worry about customs inspection. Our
agent in Seattle intercepted the shipment and delivered it to the buyers. But
this background has little to do with your being here.
"Your friend Heidegger started it all. He had to get
curious. In order to eliminate the possibility that someone might find
something fishy, we had to eliminate Heidegger. To cover his death and just in
case he told someone else, we had to hit the whole section. But you botched our
operation through blind luck."
Malcolm cleared his throat. "Why are you letting me
live?"
Maronick smiled, "Because I know Atwood. He won't feel
safe until my associates and I are dead. We're the only ones who can link him
to the whole mess. Except you. Consequently, we have to die. He is probably
thinking of a way to get rid of us. We are supposed to pick up those envelopes
at the bank tomorrow. I'm quite sure we would be shot in a holdup attempt,
killed in a car wreck, or just 'disappear.' Atwood plays dumb, but he's
not."
Malcolm looked at the dark shape on the ground. "I
still don't understand. Why did you kill that man Charles?"
"I like to cover my tracks too. He was dangerous dead
weight. It will make no difference to me who reads the letters. The
powers-that-be already know I'm involved. I shall quietly disappear to the
Middle East, where a man of my talents can always find suitable employment.
"But I don't want to turn a corner someday and find
American agents waiting for me, so I'm giving the country a little present in
hopes it will regard me as a sheep gone astray but not worth chasing. My
farewell present— Robert Atwood. I'm letting you live for somewhat the same
reason. You also have the chance to deliver Mr. Atwood. He has caused you a lot
of grief. After all, it was he who necessitated all those deaths. I am merely a
technician like yourself. Sorry about the girl, but I had no option. C'est la guerre."
Malcolm sat for a long time. Finally he said, "What's
the immediate plan?"
Maronick stood. He threw the switchblade at Malcolm's feet.
Then he gave him still another injection. His voice was impassive. "This
is an extremely strong stimulant. It would put a dead man on his feet for half
a day. It should give you enough oomph to handle Atwood. He's old, but he's
still very dangerous. When you cut yourself free, get back to the clearing
where we parked the car. In case you didn't notice, it's the same one you used.
There are one or two things that might help you in the back seat. I would park
just outside his gate, then work my way to the rear of the house. Climb the
tree and go in through the window on the second floor. It somehow got unlocked.
Do what you like with him. If he kills you, there are still the letters and
several corpses for him to explain."
Maronick looked down at the figure by his feet.
"Goodbye, Condor. One last word of advice. Stick to research. You've used
up all your luck. When it comes right down to it, you're not very good."
He vanished in the woods.
After a few minutes of silence, Malcolm heard a car start
and drive away. He wormed his way toward the knife.
It took him half an hour. Twice he cut his wrists, but each
time it was only minor and the bleeding stopped as soon as he quit using his
hands.
He found the car. There was a note taped to the window. The
body of the man called Cutler sprawled by the door. He had been shot in the
back. The note had been written while the tall man carried Malcolm into the
woods. It was short, to the point: "Your gun jammed with mud. Rifle in
back has 10 rds. Hope you can use automatic."
The rifle in back was an ordinary .22 varmint rifle. Cutler
had used it for target practice. Maronick left it for Malcolm, as he figured
any amateur could handle so light a weapon. He left the automatic pistol with
silencer just in case. Malcolm ripped the note off and drove away.
By the time he coasted the car to a stop outside Atwood's
gate, Malcolm felt the drug taking effect. The pounding in the back of his neck
and head, the little pains in his body, all had vanished. In their place was a
surging, confident energy. He knew he would have to fight the overestimation
and overconfidence the drug brought.
The oak tree proved simple to climb and the window was
unlocked. Malcolm unslung the rifle. He worked the bolt to arm the weapon.
Slowly, quietly, he tiptoed to the dark hall, down the carpeted hallway to the
head of the stairs. He heard Tchaikovsky's "1812" Overture booming
from the room where he had been questioned. Every now and then a triumphant hum
would come from a familiar voice. Slowly Malcolm went down the stairs.
Atwood had his back to the door when Malcolm entered the
room. He was choosing another record from the rack in the wall. His hand paused
on Beethoven's Fifth.
Malcolm very calmly raised the rifle, clicked off the
safety, took aim, and fired. Hours of practice on gophers, rabbits, and tin
cans guided the bullet home. It shattered Atwood's right knee, bringing him
screaming to the floor.
Terror and pain filled the old man's eyes. He rolled over in
time to see Malcolm work the action again. He screamed as Malcolm's second
bullet shattered his other knee. His mouth framed the question,
"Why?"
"Your question is futile. Let's just say I didn't want
you going anywhere for a while."
Malcolm moved in a frenzy of activity. He tied towels around
the moaning man's knees to slow the bleeding; then he tied his hands to an end
table. He ran upstairs and aimlessly rifled rooms, burning up the energy
coursing through his blood. He fought hard and was able to control his mind.
Maronick chose his drugs well, he thought. Atwood the planner, the director,
the thinker was downstairs, Malcolm thought, in pain and harmless. The
secondary members of the cell were all dead. Maronick was the only one left,
Maronick the enforcer, Maronick the killer. Malcolm thought briefly of the
voices on the other end of the Panic Line, the professionals, professionals
like Maronick. No, he thought, so far it has been me. Them against me. Maronick
had made it even more personal when he killed Wendy. To the professionals it
was just a job. They didn't care. Hazy details of a plan formed around his
ideas and wants. He ran to Atwood's bedroom, where he exchanged his tattered
clothes for one of several suits. Then he visited the kitchen and devoured some
cold chicken and pie. He went back to the room where Atwood lay, took a quick
look around, then dashed to his car for the long drive.
* * *
Atwood lay very still for some time after Malcolm had left.
Slowly, weakly, he tried to pull himself and the table across the floor. He was
too weak. All he succeeded in doing was knocking a picture off the table. It
fell face up. The glass didn't break into shreds he could use to cut his bonds.
He resigned himself to his fate. He slumped prone, resting for whatever might
lie ahead. He looked briefly at the picture and sighed. It was of him. In his
uniform of a captain in the United States Navy.
Employees must wash their hands
before leaving.
—Traditional rest-room sign
Chapter 11
Wednesday Morning
Mitchell had reached what Agency psychiatrists call the
Crisis Acclimatization Level, or Zombie Stage 4. For six days he had been
stretched as tight as any spring could be stretched. He adjusted to this state
and now accepted the hypertension and hyperactivity as normal. In this state he
would be extremely competent and extremely effective as long as any challenge
fell within the context of the conditions causing the state. Any foreign
stimulus would shatter his tensed composure and tear him apart at the seams.
One of the symptoms of this state is the ignorance of the subject. Mitchell
merely felt a little nervous. His rational process told him he must have
overcome the exhaustion and tension with a sort of second wind. That was why he
was still awake at 4:20 in the morning. Disheveled and smelly from six days
without bathing, he sat behind his desk going over reports for the hundredth
time. He hummed softly. He had no idea the two additional security men standing
by the coffee urn were for him. One was his backup and the other was a
psychiatrist protégé of Dr. Lofts. The psychiatrist was there to watch Mitchell
as well as monitor any of Malcolm's calls.
Brrring!
The call jerked all the men in the room out of relaxation.
Mitchell calmly held up one hand to reassure them while he used the other hand
to pick up the receiver. His easy movements had the quiet quickness of a
natural athlete or a well-oiled machine.
"493-7282."
"This is Condor. It's almost over."
"I see. Then why don't you…"
"I said almost. Now listen, and get it right. Maronick,
Weatherby, and their gang were working under a man called Atwood. They were
trying to cover their tracks from a smuggling operation they pulled off in
1968. They used Agency facilities and Heidegger found out. The rest just sort
of came naturally.
"I've got one chore left. If I don't succeed, you'll
know about it. At any rate, I've mailed some stuff to my bank. You better pick
it up. It will be there this morning.
"You better send a pretty good team to Atwood's right
away.
He lives at 42 Elwood Lane, Chevy Chase," (Mitchell's
second picked up a red phone and began to speak softly. In another part of the
bulding men raced toward waiting cars. A second group raced toward a Cobra
combat helicopter kept perpetually ready on the building roof.) "Send a
doctor with them. Two of Maronick's men are in the woods behind the house, but
they're dead. Wish me luck."
The phone clicked before Mitchell could speak. He looked at
his trace man and got a negative shake of the head.
The room burst into activity. Phones were lifted and all
through Washingtion people woke to the shrill ring of a special bell.
Typewriters clicked, messengers ran from the room. Those who could find nothing
definite to do paced. The excitement around him did not touch Mitchell. He sat
at his desk, calmly running through the developed procedure. His forehead and
palms were dry, but deep in his eyes a curious light burned.
* * *
Malcolm depressed the phone hook and inserted another dime.
The buzzer only sounded twice.
The girl had been selected for her soft, cheery voice.
"Good morning. TWA. May I help you?"
"Yes, my name is Henry Cooper. My brother is flying out
today for an overdue vacation. Getting away from it all, you understand. He
didn't tell anyone where he was going for sure because he hadn't made up his
mind. What we want to do is give him a last-minute going-away present. He's
already left his apartment, but we think he's on Flight 27, leaving at six.
Could you tell me if he has a reservation?"
There was slight pause, then, "Yes, Mr. Cooper, your
brother has booked a reservation on that flight for… Chicago. He hasn't picked
up his ticket yet."
"Fine, I really appreciate this. Could you do me
another favor and not tell him we called? The surprise is named Wendy, and there's
a chance she'll be either flying with him or taking the next plane."
"Of course, Mr. Cooper. Shall I make a reservation for
the lady?"
"No, thank you. I think we better wait and see how it
works out at the airport. The plane leaves at six, right?"
"Right."
"Fine, we'll be there. Thank you."
"Thank you, sir, for thinking of TWA."
Malcolm stepped out of the phone booth. He brushed some lint
off his sleeve. Atwood's uniform fitted him fairly well, though it was somewhat
bulky. The shoes were a loose fit and his feet tended to slip in them. The
highly polished leather creaked as he walked from the parking lot into the main
lobby of National Airport. He carried the raincoat draped over his arm and
pulled the hat low over his forehead.
Malcolm dropped an unstamped envelope addressed to the CIA
in a mailbox. The letter contained all he knew, including Maronick's alias and
flight number. The Condor hoped he wouldn't have to rely on the U.S. postal
system.
The terminal was beginning to fill with the bustling people
who would pass through it during the day. A wheezing janitor swept cigarette
butts off the red rug. A mother tried to coax a bored infant into submission. A
nervous coed sat wondering if her roommate's half-fare card would work. There
young Marines headed home to Michigan wondered if she would work. A retired
wealthy executive and a penniless wino slept in adjoining chairs, both waiting
for daughters to fly in from Detroit. A Fuller Brush executive sat perfectly
still, bracing himself for the effects of a jet flight on a gin hangover. The
programmer for the piped-in music had decided to jazz up the early-morning
hours, and a nameless orchestra played watered-down Beatle music.
Malcolm strode to a set of chairs within hearing range of
the TWA desk. He sat next to the three Marines, who respectfully ignored his
existence. He held a magazine so it obscured most of his face. His eyes never
left the TWA desk. His right hand slipped inside the Navy jacket to bring the
silenced automatic out. He slipped his gun-heavy hand under the raincoat and
settled back to wait.
At precisely 5:30 Maronick walked confidently through the
main doors. The striking gentleman had developed a slight limp, the kind
observers invariably try to avoid looking at and the kind they always watch.
The limp dominates their impression and their mind blurs the other details
their eyes record. A uniform often accomplishes the same thing.
Maronick had grown a mustache with the help of a
theatrical-supply house, and when he stopped at the TWA desk Malcolm did not
recognize him. But Maronick's soft voice drew his attention, and he strained to
hear the conversation.
"My name is James Cooper. I believe you have a
reservation for me."
The desk clerk flipped her head slightly to place the
wandering auburn lock where it belonged. "Yes, Mr. Cooper, Flight 27 to
Chicago. You have about fifteen minutes until boarding time."
"Fine." Maronick paid for his ticket, checked his
one bag, and walked aimlessly away from the counter. Almost empty, he thought.
Good. A few servicemen, everything normal; mother and baby, normal; old drunks,
normal; college girl, normal. No large preponderance of men standing around
busily doing nothing. No one scurrying to phones, including the girl behind the
desk. Everything normal. He relaxed even more and began to stroll, checking the
terminal and giving his legs the exercise they would miss on the long flight.
He didn't notice the Navy captain who slowly joined him at a distance of twenty
paces.
Malcolm almost changed his mind when he saw Maronick looking
so confident and capable. But it was too late for that. Help might not arrive
in time and Maronick might get away. Besides, this was something Malcolm had to
do himself. He fought down the drug-edged nervousness. He would get only one
chance.
National Airport, while not breathtakingly beautiful, is
attractive. Maronick allowed himself to admire the symmetry of the corridors he
passed through. Fine colors, smooth lines.
Suddenly he stopped. Malcolm barely had time to dodge behind
a rack of comic books. The proprietress gave him a withering glance but said
nothing. Maronick checked his watch and held a quick debate with himself. He
would just have time. He began to move again, substituting a brisk walk for his
leisurely stroll. Malcolm followed his example, carefully avoiding loud
foot-steps on the marble stretches. Maronick took a sudden right and passed
through a door, which swung shut behind him.
Malcolm trotted to the door. His hand holding the gun under
the raincoat was sweating from the heat, the drug, and his nerves. He stopped
outside the brown door. Gentlemen. He looked around him. No one. Now or never.
Being careful to keep the gun between his body and the door, he pulled the
weapon out from under the coat. He tossed the heavy raincoat to a nearby chair.
Finally, his heart beating against his chest, he leaned on the door.
It opened easily and quietly. One inch. Malcolm could see
the glistening white brightness of the room. Mirrors sparkled on the wall to
his far left. He opened the door a foot. The wall with the door had a line of
three shiny sinks. He could see four urinals on the opposite wall, and he could
make out the corner of one stall. No one stood at the sinks or the urinals.
Lemony disinfectant tingled his nose. He pushed the door open and stepped in.
It closed behind him with a soft woosh
and he leaned heavily against it.
The room was brighter than the spring day outside the
building. The piped-in music found no material capable of absorbing its volume,
so the sound echoed off the tile walls— cold, crisp, blaring notes. There were
three stalls opposite Malcolm. In the one on the far left he could see shoes,
toes pointed toward him. Their polish added to the brightness of the room. The
flute in the little box on the ceiling posed a gay musical question and the
piano answered. Malcolm slowly raised the gun. The sound of toilet paper
turning a spindle cued the band. The flute piped a more melancholy note as it
inquired once more. A tiny click from the gun's safety preceded the sound of
tearing paper and the piano's soft reply.
The gun jumped in Malcolm's hand. A hole tore through the
thin metal stall door. Inside the stall the legs jerked, then pushed upward.
Maronick, slightly wounded in the neck, desperately reached for the gun in his
back pocket, but his pants were around his ankles. Maronick normally carried
his gun holstered either at his belt or under his arm, but he had planned to
ditch the weapon before passing through the security screening at the airport.
There would probably be no need of a gun this stage of the plan, especially at
a large, crowded airport, but the cautious Maronick put his gun in his back
pocket, unobtrusive but sometimes awkward to reach, just in case.
Malcolm fired again. Another bullet tore through screeching
metal to bury itself in Maronick's chest and fling his body against the wall.
Malcolm fired again, and again and again and again. The gun spat the spent
cartridge cases onto the tile floor. Bitter cordite mixed with the lemony
smell. Malcolm's third bullet ripped a hole through Maronick's stomach.
Maronick sobbed softly, and fell down along the right side of the metal cage.
His weakening arm depressed the plunger. The woosh of water and waste momentarily drowned out his sobs and the
coughs from the gun. As Malcolm fired the fourth time, a passing stewardess
hearing the muffled cough remembered it was cold season. She vowed to buy some
vitamins. That bullet missed Maronick's sinking form. The lead shattered on the
tile wall, sending little pieces of shrapnel into the metal walls and tile
roof.
A few hit Maronick's back, but they made no difference.
Malcolm's fifth bullet buried itself in Maronick's left hip, positioning man on
the stool.
Malcolm could see the arms and feet of a man slumped on a
toilet. A few red flecks stained the tile pattern. Slowly, almost deliberately,
Maronick's body began to slide of the toilet. Malcolm had to be sure before he
confronted the man's face so he squeezed the trigger for the last two rounds.
An awkward knee on a naked and surprisingly hairless leg jammed against a stall
post. The body shifted slightly as it settled to the floor. Malcolm could see
enough of the pale face. Death replaced Maronick's striking appearance with a
rather common, glassy dullness. Malcolm dropped the gun to the floor. It
skidded to a stop near the body.
It took Malcolm a few minutes to find a phone booth. Finally
a pretty oriental stewardess helped the rather dazed naval officer. He even had
to borrow a dime from her.
"493-7282." Mitchell's voice wavered slightly.
Malcolm took his time. In a very tired voice he said,
"This is Malcolm. It's over. Maronick is dead. Why don't you send somebody
to pick me up? I'm at National Airport. So is Maronick. I'm the guy in the Navy
uniform by the Northwest terminal."
Three carloads of agents arrived two minutes ahead of the
squad car summoned by the janitor who had found more than dirty toilets in his
rest room.
The whole is equal to the sum of its
parts.
—Traditional mathematical concept
Chapter 12
Wednesday Afternoon
"It was like shooting birds in a cage." The three
men sipped their coffee. Powell looked at the smiling old man and Dr. Lofts.
"Maronick didn't stand a chance."
The old man looked at the doctor. "Do you have any
explanation for Malcolm's actions?"
The large man considered his answer, then said,
"Without having talked to him at great length, no. Given his experiences
of the last few days, especially the deaths of his friends and his belief that
the girl was dead, his upbringing, training, and the general situation he found
himself in, to say nothing of the drug's possible effect, I think his reaction
was logical."
Powell nodded. He turned to his superior and said,
"How's Atwood?"
"Oh, he will live, for a while at least. I always
wondered about his oafishness. He did too well to be the idiot he played. He
can be replaced. How are we handling Maronick's death?"
Powell grinned. "Very carefully. The police don't like
it, but we've pressured them into accepting the idea that the Capitol Hill
Killer committed suicide in the men's room of National Airport. Of course, we
had to bribe the janitor to forget what he saw. No real problems,
however."
A phone by the old man's elbow rang. He listened for a few
moments, then hung up. He pushed the button next to the phone and the door
opened.
Malcolm was coming down from the drug. He had spent three
hours bordering on hysteria, and during that time he had talked continually.
Powell, Dr. Lofts, and the old man heard six days compressed into three hours.
They told him Wendy was alive after he finished, and when they took him to see
her he was dazed by exhaustion. He stared at the peacefully sleeping form in
the bright, antiseptic room and seemed not to be aware of the nurse standing
beside him. "Everything will be fine." She said it twice but got no
reaction. All Malcolm could see of Wendy was a small head swathed in bandages
and a sheet-covered form connected by wires and plastic tubing to a complicated
machine. "My God," he whispered with mixed relief and regret,
"my God." They let him stand there in silence for several minutes
before they sent him out to be cleaned up. Now he had on clothes from his
apartment, but he looked strange even in them.
"Ah, Malcolm, dear boy, sit down. We won't keep you
long." The old man was at his charming best, but he failed to affect
Malcolm.
"Now, we don't want you to worry about a thing.
Everything is taken care of. After you've had a nice long rest, we want you to
come back and talk to us. You will do that, won't you, my boy?"
Malcolm slowly looked at the three men. To them his voice
seemed very old, very tired. To him it seemed new. "I don't have much
choice, do I?"
The old man smiled, patted him on the back, and, mumbling
platitudes, led him to the door. When he returned to his seat, Powell looked at
him and said, "Well, sir, that's the end of our Condor."
The old man's eyes twinkled. "Don't be so sure, Kevin,
my boy, don't be so sure."
About the Author
James Grady, journalist and author of over ten acclaimed
works of suspense and espionage, published his first and most enduring work, Six Days of the Condor, when he was
twenty four years old. It provided the basis for Sydney Pollack's classic 1975
film Three Days of the Condor, which
featured an all-star cast, including Faye Dunaway and Robert Redford as the
Condor. Grady followed up this enormous success with 1975's Shadow of the Condor.
Grady has also worked as a consultant and story editor for
movies and television, and an investigative reporter for Pulitzer Prize-winning
journalist Jack Anderson. The latter occupation has provided raw material for
many of his later novels, including Razor
Game (1981) and Runner in the Street
(1984). A native of Montana, Grady now makes his home in Washington, D.C., the
city which has inspired much of his fiction.
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